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what's the definition of (Velocity u.Gradient X) PLS? |
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February 24, 2010, 23:23 |
what's the definition of (Velocity u.Gradient X) PLS?
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#1 |
New Member
harry
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 29
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Hi,
I'm wondering of the exact definition of some variable calculators provided by CFX POST, such as (Velocity u.Gradient X), (Velocity v.Gradient Y), (Velocity w.Gradient Z) please? Do they simply mean the velocity component gradient on each direction please? In that case, the value should have a unit of "s", however, I noticed there is not such unit. Besides, I sum the above three terms in order to verify the conservation of mass (density is constant), while the result is far from zero (in solve process, the calculation reached convergency). Similar thing also happens when I tried to check momentum equation balance. Could anyone give me advice or help please? Thanks! |
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February 25, 2010, 02:04 |
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#2 |
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harry
Join Date: May 2009
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anyone help me please?
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February 25, 2010, 13:21 |
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#3 |
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The unit of those variables should be [s^-1] instead of [s]. Where did you sum those three terms, over a surface or volume?
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February 25, 2010, 22:21 |
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#4 |
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harry
Join Date: May 2009
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Hi,
Yes, you are right. I just simply created several points in the fluid domain, and for each point, I can obtain the three terms by calculators in post, and summed them, because I think the continuity equation should work for each point. Do you mean I should sum over a surface or volume please? |
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February 26, 2010, 04:40 |
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#5 |
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Glenn Horrocks
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When you set a point in CFD-post it just interpolates the value from the surrounding nodes. This interpolation is not conservative - meaning that conservation is not enforced. Conservation is enforced at the control volume level, or at least you converge towards conservation.
You have not explained what you want to do. Do you want to check conservation at a point (ie in an individual control volume)? Or do you want to check global conservation (ie inlet flow equals the outlet flow)? Both of these are reported in the output file - the first as the residual, and the second as imbalances. |
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February 26, 2010, 06:04 |
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#6 |
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harry
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Hi Glenn,
Thanks a lot for your input. Yes, I just want to check the conservation at a point. |
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February 26, 2010, 06:19 |
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#7 |
Super Moderator
Glenn Horrocks
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OK, well first of all you can't do conservation at a point. The smallest unit is the control volume and conservation is achieved by the fluxes through the control volume faces. You do not have access to the fluxes in the control volume faces in CFD-Post, you will have to use fortran to access them.
But why do you want to do this? If you want to see how good the convergence is then just look at the residuals. Have a look in the documentation for what the residual means. |
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February 26, 2010, 08:10 |
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#8 |
New Member
harry
Join Date: May 2009
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Rep Power: 17 |
Hi Glenn,
I got it. Thank you very much for your kind help. |
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