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June 6, 2021 at 11:45 pm
Rick28
SubscriberHi,
I am modeling a long pipe with turbulent flow using axisymmetric geometry. The pipe is oriented along the X coordinate axis and water flow moves in the positive X direction. I would like to include the effect of pressure head in this model to simulate an inclined pipe. So far I have calibrated to pressure drop with the pipe in the horizontal orientation with an analytical expression. I next ran a case with gravity turned on and input the value of g as negative in the X coordinate. Simulation results for pressure drop in this case (vertical pipe?) were the same as the case without gravity. I would like to see the pressure drop for a given flow rate increase as the inclination angle increases. I would appreciate any advice to help me progress on this simulation. Thank You!!!!!
June 7, 2021 at 10:58 amRob
Forum ModeratorFor axisymmetric you can only use gravity in the vertical direction, any other vector is going to give a radial gravity vector which is nonsense. Assuming you're looking for the hydrostatic component set the operating density to zero, and read the documentation.
June 7, 2021 at 2:15 pmRick28
SubscriberHi Rob Thank you for your response. I am still confused because there is an option for specifying the gravity vector in any coordinate?
I have done more research and am thinking that maybe I must do a multiphase, transient analysis for elevation head to be implemented in the code. My original question was based on a steady-state analysis.
Thank You!!!!
June 7, 2021 at 2:27 pmaitor.amatriain
SubscriberAs Rob says, it makes no sense to include gravity in a direction different to the axis of revolution. Your problem is 3D, and, as you mention in your previous message, you should consider multiphase simulations if you are expecting to have a liquid/gas interface (for example, if mass flow rate is low and you reach a static solution). As a first test, VOF steady simulation should give you a good estimate.
June 7, 2021 at 2:40 pmRick28
SubscriberHi
Thank you Aitor!!! My feeling is the axisymmetric formulation should be valid for any coordinate axis? In my model I have assigned gravity to the X coordinate which is the axis of the pipe. At this point I only have one phase in the pipe with no liquid/gas interface. The pipe without gravity has been calibrated with an analytical solution. I thought that I could simulate the effects of pipe inclination by manipulating the gravity vector rather than building a new geometry for each inclination.
Thank You!!!
June 7, 2021 at 2:47 pmaitor.amatriain
SubscriberIf you create a 3D geometry, you can use the same mesh for all cases. In that situation, you only need to change the direction of the gravity vector, but this is only possible in 3D.
June 7, 2021 at 2:51 pmRick28
SubscriberHi
Thank you Aitor!!! My feeling is the axisymmetric formulation should be valid for any coordinate axis? In my model I have assigned gravity to the X coordinate which is the axis of the pipe. At this point I only have one phase in the pipe with no liquid/gas interface. Turbulent flow in the pipe, without gravity, has been calibrated with an analytical solution. I thought that I could simulate the effects of pipe inclination by manipulating the gravity vector rather than building a new geometry for each inclination.
Thank You!!!
June 7, 2021 at 2:53 pmRick28
SubscriberHi Aitor Are you saying that I cannot get the pressure head effect with the axisymmetric option?
Thank You!!!
June 7, 2021 at 3:15 pmaitor.amatriain
SubscriberThink about the physical meaning of axisymmetry. If your gravity has two components and you consider an axisymmetric model, do you see that there will be a radial component?
June 7, 2021 at 3:27 pmRick28
SubscriberHi Aitor Hi Aitor I finally got it!!!!
Viewing 9 reply threads- The topic ‘Fluent K Epsilon Turbulence Model with Pressure Head’ is closed to new replies.
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