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February 14, 2023 at 12:11 pm
Mohammed.Ali
SubscriberHi, I am trying to model natural convection in an external domain around a 2D cylinder. all my boundary conditions are pressure outlets with gauge pressure set to 0. My cylinder wall temp is 350k and ambient air temp is 294k.
With bousinessq, i am getting accurate flow patterns and heat transfer coefficients. However, when i change the density model to incompressible ideal gas or ideal gas (and i am setting all the parameters and operating conditions correctly), the flow is occuring downwards (with gravity) instead of against gravity.
This seems to be a major problem with no solution anywhere. Any help would be appreciated -
February 14, 2023 at 1:14 pm
C N
Ansys EmployeeHello,
When you change the model to incompressible ideal gas , I recommend you set in the operating conditions to activate the gravity acceleration and give negative direction in z axis -9.81m/s . This way the flow may occur against the gravity . Morever the ideal incompressible gas is used for weak compressible gas with temperature dependency and ideal gas accounts for both pressure and temperature effects. Hope this solves your problem
Thanks
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February 14, 2023 at 2:34 pm
Mohammed.Ali
SubscriberHi, thanks for the reply.
Â
My simulation works for boussinesq. I have gravity already set. However, as soon as i switch to ideal gas, the flow of air goes downwards with gravity. Is there any recommendation for simulation natural convection with ideal gas assumption - I could use boussinesq, however, when I want to deal with high temperatures, too many errors will be introduced.Â
Â
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February 14, 2023 at 3:05 pm
Rob
Forum ModeratorInitialise the model at "outside" conditions. Find the domain density and put that EXACT value into the operating density. Your error is down to the way Fluent accounts (or rather doesn't) for hydrostatic pressure on the external boundary.Â
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February 14, 2023 at 3:09 pm
Mohammed.Ali
Subscriberso when I use the ideal gas model, would my inputs be:
- operating pressure: 101325
- operating density: 1.095 (density of air that i want to use)
- while my boundary conditions are all pressure outlets with a gauge pressure of 0
?Â
Â
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February 14, 2023 at 3:20 pm
Rob
Forum ModeratorIf the GAUGE pressure is zero what is the pressure? If you initialise the domain, what is the density that Fluent reports? Compute a contour having initialised from the pressure boundaries, turn off node values.Â
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February 14, 2023 at 3:23 pm
Mohammed.Ali
Subscriberafter initialising, the pressure reported in the whole domain is 1.01 kg/m^3
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February 14, 2023 at 3:27 pm
Mohammed.Ali
Subscriberhowever, I just checked and it was initialoising the domain temperature as my cylinder wall surface temp instead of an ambien temp. so my whole domain was at 350k while it should be at 294k. is that what causes the unrealisitc flow do you think?Â
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February 14, 2023 at 4:50 pm
Rob
Forum ModeratorWhat did you set the operating density as? Use all of the decimal places in the operating conditions panel, so, 1.181234 kg/m3 or whatever Fluent returns.Â
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February 14, 2023 at 4:51 pm
Mohammed.Ali
Subscriber1.095kg/m3
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February 14, 2023 at 4:56 pm
Mohammed.Ali
Subscriberfyi, my model is:
- 2d horizontal cylindar with a diameter of 0.3m
- domain is: 2.4m height by 1.5m widthÂ
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February 15, 2023 at 10:30 am
Rob
Forum ModeratorIs 1.095 kg/m3 EXACTLY what Fluent returned?Â
Â
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February 15, 2023 at 10:59 am
Mohammed.Ali
SubscriberSo I think i have found a solution. First i set up the model with incompressible ideal gas and have all boundary conditions as pressure outlets. Then I initialised with ambient air temperature so make fluent calculate the average fluid density. I then input this average density back into the operating density and run the simulation using this. However, I am not sure why this gives me the correct solution.
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February 15, 2023 at 11:07 am
Rob
Forum ModeratorThat is the solution, hence my first post in the thread.  Look at https://ansyshelp.ansys.com/account/Secured?returnurl=/Views/Secured/corp/v231/en/flu_ug/flu_ug_bcs_sec_operating.html specifically 7.3.1.5 You're setting rho-rho0 to be zero, so lose the gravity term for the exterior boundaries, otherwise you need to set a pressure gradient on the exterior boundary to account for (rho-rho0)gh and that gets messy.Â
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February 15, 2023 at 11:15 am
Mohammed.Ali
Subscriberah ok - i cant access the url since i am using ansys with my company and cant get access to the customer number. however, that explanation has cleared things up. cheers!!
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February 15, 2023 at 11:18 am
Rob
Forum ModeratorÂ
Click on Help in the software & it’ll add a token to the browser to then let you use the link. If you are using commercial software you may be eligible for full support - check with the licence holder (your colleague) for details.Â
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- The topic ‘NATURAL CONVECTION HEAT TRANSFER USING INCOMPRESSIBLE IDEAL GAS OR IDEAL GAS.’ is closed to new replies.
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