-
-
November 12, 2023 at 2:28 am
Jesús Urbina
SubscriberI am currently working on a 2D analysis for a supersonic flow (Mach= 2.13) over an airfoil. However, it is not clear to me how to define the farfield pressure.
I tried to calculate it using the following - isentropic - relation:
Total pressure: 1 atm
Static pressure: Farfield pressure at mach= 2.13 (this is the variable I want to define in the analysis)
Specific heats coefficient= 1.4
I suspect I didn't chose the right value for the Total Presure. What might be worth to check? What could have gone wrong with my calculations?
Worth to mention that I am using an absolute pressure. Hence, I defined the gauge pressure as 0 (Operating Conditions). -
November 13, 2023 at 7:37 pm
Federico
Ansys EmployeeI'm not sure what is your question. If using ideal gas, you have the right approach. Plug in your numbers and solve for p. You will then enter p and M in the pressure farfield BC.
You should find p ~ 0.1 p0
-
- The topic ‘Boundary Conditions: Farfield Pressure definition for supersonic flow’ is closed to new replies.
- air flow in and out of computer case
- Varying Bond model parameters to mimic soil particle cohesion/stiction
- Eroded Mass due to Erosion of Soil Particles by Fluids
- I am doing a corona simulation. But particles are not spreading.
- Centrifugal Fan Analysis for Determination of Characteristic Curve
- Guidance needed for Conjugate Heat Transfer Analysis for a 3s3p Li-ion Battery
- Issue to compile a UDF in ANSYS Fluent
- JACOBI Convergence Issue in ANSYS AQWA
- affinity not set
- Resuming SAG Mill Simulation with New Particle Batch in Rocky
-
3997
-
1461
-
1287
-
1124
-
1021
© 2025 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.