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Agriculture student here, in unfamiliar territory. Need help with visualization... |
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September 29, 2015, 16:14 |
Agriculture student here, in unfamiliar territory. Need help with visualization...
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#1 |
New Member
Gary Vogel
Join Date: Sep 2015
Posts: 1
Rep Power: 0 |
Hello, scientists. Maybe this is a long shot. I'm a graduate student at an agricultural university in the midwest. I have grain bins which I fumigated and took hourly fumigant concentration readings in. There are 23 points inside the bin, and I want to visualize the distribution/diffusion within the bins over time. I'd like to have a 3D wireframe animation showing the fumigant distribution, with, say, red showing high concentration and blue showing low concentration with a gradient in between.
I've been turned on to Tecplot as a visualization tool, but am COMPLETELY unfamiliar with using it. I'd like to just draw my geometry in AutoCAD and input the concentration data for each internal point and hit "GO", but it does not look that easy. I'm not looking for anyone to do this for me, but am looking for someone who has done work with Tecplot or a similar software who could navigate me through the necessary components. Part of my project will also be modeling the gas flow in ANSYS Fluent, which I understand also will visualize the process, but only for modeling data, not actual experimental (recorded) data. Is that right? Thanks for any help you can give. |
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September 30, 2015, 12:15 |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Scott Rumage
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 152
Rep Power: 16 |
Your question is the classic starting point for designers that want to compare experimental results to computational results. My response will attempt to give you a guideline, but will not be a detailed step by step procedure:
a. If you have a mesh, then Tecplot will create the contour plot automatically (as Tecplot will know the connectivity between the collection nodes), b. If you don’t have a mesh (because you just read in t,x,y,z,FD values and Tecplot does not know the connectivity), then: i. Create (or load) a grid in Tecplot ii. Interpolate the experimental data onto the grid iii. Once the interpolation is completed, Tecplot will be able to create a contour of the experimental data. c. Once you are successful in creating the contour (or isosurfaces) of FD, you will probably be disappointed in the appearance of the contour plot. This is because you are using 23 points to try to describe a concentration in a volume (while your ANSYS simulation will probably use ~1,000,000 points to describe the same concentration). d. Accordingly, as an engineer, you may want to think about how you will compare 23 points in experimental space with (1,000,000 points of) computational space. This work and visualization might be better done via comparative XY and 2D plots rather than volumetric plots. 3. Lastly, your experimental data are transient. So you will need to inform Tecplot that the “t” variable is time rather than another spatial dimension. You will do this by using Tecplot’s strand editor found along the top Menu Data>>Edit Time Strands>> These notes are quite general, some tutorials and additional tips can be found in Tecplot’s documentation http://www.tecplot.com/support/documentation/ and http://www.tecplot.com/support/tutorials/ . Good luck! Scott |
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