We have an exciting announcement about badges coming in May 2025. Until then, we will temporarily stop issuing new badges for course completions and certifications. However, all completions will be recorded and fulfilled after May 2025.
Fluids

Fluids

Topics related to Fluent, CFX, Turbogrid and more.

CFD simulation for aerostatic and hybrid air bearings (thin air films)

    • lxk4451
      Subscriber

      Dear Ansys Support Team,

      I am currently working on a CFD simulation involving a flat film and taper-flat film aerostatic air bearing using ANSYS Fluent. My research objective is to accurately analyze the pressure drop across the orifice curtain, which requires capturing detailed boundary layer effects near the orifice inlet and within the thin air film gap .

      Despite implementing the MultiZone mesh method with refined edge sizing and curvature control, I am encountering difficulty in achieving a fully structured and fine mesh similar to reference configurations. The mesh near the orifice and in the surrounding film tends to become unstructured, which is likely affecting the resolution of pressure, velocity and temperature gradients.

      Could you please advise on the best practices or additional mesh control strategies (such as swept mesh and etc) that would help achieve a high-quality structured mesh suitable for resolving sharp pressure gradients in thin film regions? A specific recommendation on how to maintain structured meshing with circular orifice bodies embedded in flat film domains would be greatly appreciated.

      Attached are the screenshots of my current meshing setup and geometry configuration.

      Geometry dimensions:

      40mm*40mm with gap height of 0.01mm and orifice diameter is 1mm, extruded to 2mm.

      Thank you for your support and guidance.

      Best Regards,

      Lokesh Reddy kancharla

    • Rob
      Forum Moderator

      Ansys Meshing won't map the larger face as the port is round. Some decomposition may help, but as you also want to have a more refined mesh at the centre the pave mesh may well be a better option. 

Viewing 1 reply thread
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.