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January 21, 2020 at 3:04 pm
morganj32
SubscriberI am trying to conduct some analysis in Fluent on a geometry with a cube enclosure of sides 1.26km long. When I open this in ANSYS meshing the program crashes regardless of the computer I use (before any meshing is done) and scaling the geometry down solves the problem. I suspect it is a problem with ANSYS Meshing as colleagues have made similar sized meshes in ICEM before.
I need to conduct my analysis on the full scale model but would like to still use ANSYS Meshing. I notice in Fluent there is the scale function so my question is, can I scale the geometry down by 10%, mesh the smaller geometry then in Fluent scale things up by a factor of 10?
I tried running basic simulations on two different size models using this technique and got different solutions however I am not sure if that is for another reason because I am still relatively new to ANSYS.
Thanks in advance.
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January 21, 2020 at 3:23 pm
Rob
Forum ModeratorScaling works fine in Fluent, we often scale by 1000 or 0.001 too given the confusion of mm and m during model builds. Workbench Meshing shouldn't fail for larger domains, double check it's seeing 1600m in metres and not 1600m in mm: the latter could mess with the numerical precision.Â
Note, we tend to scale in Fluent rather than in CAD to avoid CAD tolerance issues.Â
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January 21, 2020 at 4:11 pm
morganj32
SubscriberThanks for your reply.Â
I just had another try opening the full scale geometry in design modeler and it is too slow to work with (takes around 10 mins just to open) so I will use scale if possible.Â
Your last sentence has me slightly confused, I was talking about scaling in both CAD and Fluent - scale down in CAD, import to design modeler, mesh in ANSYS Meshing then scale back up in Fluent before setting up the simulations, is this what you thought I meant?
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January 22, 2020 at 3:26 pm
Rob
Forum ModeratorThat approach should be fine. I tend to avoid scaling in CAD as it's less accurate than in the solver simply due to the way CAD data is stored/created.Â
Your other option is to do the meshing in Fluent Meshing using the watertight geometry workflow: generally easier than Workbench. Â
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zFsa1Ezot8Y
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January 29, 2020 at 6:37 pm
morganj32
SubscriberSorry for the late reply, i had to do other things but thank you for your help so far.Â
The part of your reply I do not understand is how you do the scaling in the solver instead of CAD. I am scaling in both: CAD to scale down 10% then the solve (Fluent) after meshing to scale up 10%. How could I scale it down in the solver before meshing it?
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January 31, 2020 at 3:53 pm
Rob
Forum ModeratorIf you're in the solver there's a scale button. I tend to read anything (CAD scale) into Fluent Meshing and then sort the scale out afterwards. This means I can read in models in inches, feet, metres and occasionally km, mesh with a suitable cell size and then scale later. I always avoid any scaling in CAD if I can.Â
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February 2, 2020 at 7:00 pm
morganj32
SubscriberSorry I still do not understand, it sounds like you are talking about something different to what I am doing.Â
To be clear, when you say solver do you mean Fluent? I cannot read the unscaled geometry into Meshing - that is what causes the problem for me.Â
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February 3, 2020 at 10:31 am
Rob
Forum ModeratorOK. Can you read the unscaled geometry in Fluent Meshing? Â
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November 3, 2022 at 11:05 am
Mohamed123
SubscriberHello,
I have a question regarding scaling in ANSYS. Is there a way to scale the result (not geometry) in ANSYS.... For example, suppose that I have a 1 m3 cube, and instead of running the calculation on this large model, I run the calculation on a small model (10 mm3 cube), and after obtaining the results (let's say the temperature contour), I need to scale this temperature contour to the large model (1 m3)... Is it possible?
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- The topic ‘Using Scale in ANSYS’ is closed to new replies.
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