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August 18, 2021, 06:11 |
Flow over flat plate with chtMultiregionfoam
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#1 |
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Claudia
Join Date: Mar 2021
Posts: 43
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Hey guys!
So i have a multiregion case and no analytical or experimental data to compare it to. In order to get a feeling on how fine the grid must be and how many layers i need, i would like to simulate a flow over a heatet plate and compare it to analytical solutions. I was pretty succesful when i tried it for a single region case, but i was wondering if i can do the same for a multiregion case (or if it is sufficient to just do it for single region). The case is steadyState with a laminar flow. I managed to simulate the flow over a plate but I am not really satisfied with the outcome (i am looking at the wallheatflux). So i was wondering if I need to use another boundary condition. Fot T i usually use the compressible::turbulentTemperatureCoupledBaffleMix ed and for U "fixedValue uniform (0 0 0)". Are there other boundary conditions I could try for the mappedWall patch? |
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September 18, 2021, 08:33 |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 353
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That depends what you want to compare your simulation to. For a flat plate there are usually nusselt numbers given (for turbulent flow). Which you can generate from your heat flux. You need to be careful though how the specific paper calculated that number (what reference temperature was choosen). There should be several papers out there with those values.
For purely laminar flow you can calculate the temperature profile in the fluid depending on the boundary condition. This is called the Graetz Problem. Which yields a constant nusselt number after the initial region. There is no analytical solution for a solid region attached to it. The boundary condition of a fixed temperature or a fixed heat flux needs to be applied to the fluids surface. And there are solutions for the temperature profile for both of them. Keep in mind that those start with a fully developed flow profile. You hence need to choose a parabolic inlet profile. There are boundary conditions for that. If you need help setting those up i'll give you an example. You likely need this boundary condition for heat transfer. Either in the solid or the fluid region (solidThermo/fluidThermo). With either the coefficient mode to specify a htc or heat transfer coefficient at the wall. Or in power or flux mode to specify power in watt or flux in watt/mē at the surface. Here you need to keep in mind that this is specified over the entire surface. Hence the thickness of your 2d mesh is incorporated into that. Code:
yourBoundary { type externalWallHeatFluxTemperature; mode coefficient; Ta uniform 313.15; h uniform 10000; kappaMethod solidThermo; value $internalField; } The problem with a solid region you might face is that you might not get a good paper that lists the thickness of the solid and the type of boundary condition that might apply on it's non coupled surface. If you want to test it though simple choose a thin solid region. It should give you results very close to the pure single region solution. |
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