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Is there a way to calculate the grinding consumption through FLUENT

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber
    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      For powder milling? I suspect you'll want Ansys Rocky for that. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      My idea is to use fluent to calculate the amount of grinding of the object. I am currently doing CMP analysis and need to simulate the amount of grinding

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      Please can you explain with pictures? I have no idea what the CMP analysis means, but may recognise it by a different name. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      Through fluent calculation like this, the grinding liquid enters the gap between the wafer and the pad for grinding. Is there a way to calculate the amount of grinding?

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      If you can relate wall shear stress to grinding, yes. There's not a model in Fluent that'll do this directly. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      However, the model I set is to set water and air for vof. At present, only the flow field of water can be made.

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber
      How should I set up according to your suggestion, thank you
    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      Linking shear to grinding? You need a correlation and you can then use a Custom Field Function (or UDF) to plot the value of the supplied correlation. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      If looking at shear alone, do I just need to set the shear force on the surface

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      You'd be using not setting the value. It depends on what correlation you have and want to use. I can't help you with the what, that's for your literature review to figure out. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      Because the literature I read is mainly based on experiments, and I have not found anyone using fluent to calculate the amount of grinding.

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      Fluent doesn't have a grinding model. Fluent can give you parameters that can be used in an experimentally derrived correlation to calculate a grinding rate. So you can do the experiment on a simple, safe system and employ Fluent for complicated, dangerous and expensive enviroments as part of the design process. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      Then if I set vof and DPM model to set water and particles for flow field analysis, can I know that the particles are in contact with the surface?

       

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      You can check their position. There's also the erosion and accretion model(s), but they're designed for impact effects rather than grinding. However, if it's a high volume fraction of solids DPM isn't appropriate. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      Then I would like to ask how to set the proportion distribution of the liquid mixture concentration

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      Of the DPM? Once they're in the system the particles will do where the flow takes them. Volume injection may be appropriate, but I don't think you want DPM for this. Is the liquid a high volume fraction slurry? 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      Because my current idea is to flow into the pure liquid with a volume fraction of 1 first, then flow into the grinding dope after 30 seconds, and judge the distribution volume of the dope

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      And would the grinding dope mix with the liquid? Is it a slurry?

       

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      Yes, I'm going to do VOF for this part or component transfer is better

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      If it mixes I'd potentially use species, but I'd also look at nonNewtonian viscosity for the slurry to avoid needing the solids. There's a fair bit of literature covering this - blood and sewage sludge being two fluids I've seen represented in this way. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      I don't intend to incorporate solid materials; instead, I plan to mix fluids with a density of one (water) with different densities.

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber
    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      I am conducting a Volume of Fluid (VOF) analysis using two immiscible liquids with different densities for rotation. However, in the volume fraction part, it doesn't seem like they are mixing together as intended.

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      Immiscible and VOF, so the fluids shouldn't mix. If that's the phase volume fraction then the above looks sensible for that definition and model. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      If it is a hybrid VOF method, how should I modify the settings?

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      You mean multi-fluid VOF? It's set from the Eulerian panel, but that's still two (or more) phases. 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      mean? Also, I have another operational issue - I can't select the folder to save while creating animations."

       

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      Are you running in Workbench? 

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      YES

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      WB sets all save locations etc to avoid files being lost.  

    • hone zifu
      Subscriber

      What I mean is that I cannot select the option to set the animation folder in Fluent.

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      Because you're using Workbench. Fluent locks down the save options. 

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