How can i get velocity value on fluent ?
How can i get velocity values on a flat plate ? Example; i want to calculate velocity value at L/2 location of a flat plate ?
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Within Fluent: Display > Plots...
Otherwise, using CFD-Post might be easier if you have the license. Create a point (2-D case) or a line (3-D case) location at x=L/2 and create a chart of the velocity in this new location. |
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go to the plot menu as 'e' mentioned. There, you will need to select a location for the plot; you can make a line/rake and select it there.
Then set the appropriate x and y values (you can use curve length for the x-axis if you want to measure along the line), and you're good to go! If you want to export the plot, tick 'write to file'. The values will be printed in a text file, which you can load in excel, matlab or another program of choice to make a nicer graph that FLUENT can do. |
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Go to surface > line/rake > set the coordinates of the start and end point of your line, give the line a name and create it.
Now go to plot > x-y plot. Under surfaces (bottom right), select the line you created. As y-axis function, set the velocity (or other parameter you want to check). For x-axis function, choose curve-length |
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Please help me ...
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You can plot the horizontal velocity at the vertical line you made.
In that case, as a y-axis function, set x-velocity. (you can also swap the axis if you want; in that case, set the y-axis function as mesh > y, and the x-axis function as x-velocity) |
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Only if there is a nodal point at L/2. Otherwise you will have to interpolate between the closest points, or take the closes node value to L/2. If you have the CFD-post license, as 'e' mentioned, it may be more convenient to do it in there. In CFD-post you have an automated interpolation option as well.
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Ok, now I have a better idea of what you want - that was unclear to me first.
If you make a vertical line at x = L/2, yes, the values of x-velocity at L/2 will be exactly given, over the y-position in the boundary layer. If you want to have the values at other values of x, also set up a line at those positions, and repeat the plotting there. Make a plot for x-velocity vs y-position at every x you want. |
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Sorry, don't have time for that. But I think if you follow the steps, everything should work out fine.
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