CFD Online Logo CFD Online URL
www.cfd-online.com
[Sponsors]
Home > Forums > Software User Forums > ANSYS > FLUENT

Simple question : Simple Vs Coupled solver

Register Blogs Community New Posts Updated Threads Search

Like Tree20Likes
  • 5 Post By vinerm
  • 15 Post By LuckyTran

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old   March 3, 2017, 05:31
Red face Simple question : Simple Vs Coupled solver
  #1
New Member
 
Maria Angela - Roma
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: italia - Roma
Posts: 2
Rep Power: 0
Maria Angela is on a distinguished road
Hello,

i am working on a simulation around an airfoil at very high Rey, the Simple solver doesn't converge even i decreased the under-relaxation factors but the coupled V-P works. my question is why ?


Thank you for your help & support

Maria
Maria Angela is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   March 4, 2017, 13:10
Default
  #2
Senior Member
 
Lucky
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Orlando, FL USA
Posts: 5,675
Rep Power: 66
LuckyTran has a spectacular aura aboutLuckyTran has a spectacular aura aboutLuckyTran has a spectacular aura about
Is it diverging or what do you mean by converged?
LuckyTran is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   March 6, 2017, 11:44
Default Response
  #3
New Member
 
Maria Angela - Roma
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: italia - Roma
Posts: 2
Rep Power: 0
Maria Angela is on a distinguished road
Hey first of all thank you,

Well the idea is that i am runing a same mesh with SIMPLE & COUPLED solvers :

- The simple solver diverged.
- The coupled solver converged.

i just wanted to know why ?

Maria Angela is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   March 6, 2020, 07:05
Default
  #4
New Member
 
Elif Gündoğdu
Join Date: Mar 2020
Posts: 2
Rep Power: 0
Lifen09 is on a distinguished road
Hi, have you figured it out yet? My solutions were converged too when I used coupled solver. I just can't understand the reason
Lifen09 is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   March 6, 2020, 07:29
Default Convergence
  #5
Senior Member
 
vinerm's Avatar
 
Vinerm
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Nederland
Posts: 2,946
Blog Entries: 1
Rep Power: 35
vinerm will become famous soon enough
SIMPLE and Coupled are just two numerical approaches. Whichever works is good. The reason why one works and other not is more of physical nature. If pressure and velocity are very tightly coupled in a scenario, such as in rotating machines, then Coupled works better. If that is not the case, SIMPLE is alright. Coupled is almost always better than SIMPLE but there are a few scenarios where SIMPLE works better, such as for low Gr number Natural convection flows.
__________________
Regards,
Vinerm

PM to be used if and only if you do not want something to be shared publicly. PM is considered to be of the least priority.
vinerm is offline   Reply With Quote

Old   March 6, 2020, 15:38
Default
  #6
Senior Member
 
Lucky
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Orlando, FL USA
Posts: 5,675
Rep Power: 66
LuckyTran has a spectacular aura aboutLuckyTran has a spectacular aura aboutLuckyTran has a spectacular aura about
Well there are non-physical reasons as well.


Always first you need to state your entire model. It's hard to say why your case diverged when you don't state what you're doing. The P-V coupling solver is merely a means of solving one part of the entire problem, namely how to solve the momentum equation for pressure and velocity. Your solution can fail to converge due to problems with coupling from other equations, i.e. the energy equation. If you are not running any energy equation at all, which means you're doing an incompressible simulation, then we can actually blame it from the P-V algorithm.


SIMPLE solves a pressure correction problem and uses this to update the velocity field. Once it does this, the pressure field is in an inconsistent state with the velocity field. You are guaranteed to have the wrong pressure field, every time until your solution converges. If you carry this wrong pressure field into another equation (e.g. the energy equation) then you're done-zo. In SIMPLE you rely on iterating many times to and pray that these inconsistencies get smaller.


Next, SIMPLE doesn't use the non-orthogonal correctors and this tends to make it even more unstable for non perfect meshes. That's why the default urf's for SIMPLE are as low as they are. The bottomline is, SIMPLE is not designed to be stable, it's designed to be fast by exploiting weak coupling. For strong coupling, SIMPLE will be smelly. For bad meshes, SIMPLE will stink. For bad initial guesses, SIMPLE will really really stink.
LuckyTran is offline   Reply With Quote

Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Question about matching of solver and turbulence model louistse OpenFOAM Running, Solving & CFD 1 February 1, 2017 21:36
pressure-based coupled solver for compressible NS equation wangmianzhi Main CFD Forum 19 July 29, 2016 03:37
Question about Implicit Unsteady Solver and Maximum Inner Iterations Awesomo STAR-CCM+ 4 June 28, 2016 08:57
Convergence with coupled implicit solver Henrik Ström FLUENT 1 October 29, 2005 03:57
Segregated or coupled solver? Nori FLUENT 0 September 29, 2005 14:24


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:53.