TAGGED: fluent, heat-flux-bc
-
-
January 26, 2023 at 9:10 pm
Celine Lim
SubscriberHello all,
I am currently trying to implement a non-uniform heat flux boundary condition around a cylinder. I have my cylinder split into 4 surface, ie top_left_surface, bottom_left_surface, etc (Figure below)
For each of the outer tube surface, I am trying to implement a heat flux boundary condition via function expression using a polynomial profile that I curve fitted. The profile is for one quarter of the tube surface is implemented as below:
Here, I am assuming "0m" when z = 0, y = 23.5m (where radius of the outer surface is 23.5m). Hence, what i am expecting is that at z = 0 and y = 23.5m, the heatflux there should be about 470.1W/m^2. However, the simulation shows otherwise an the heat flux values are far off from what I am expecting.
I believe there is something I am not understanding with the cartesian coordinates when I am fitting my heat flux boundary curves, or there is something I am not understanding with implementing a polynomial profile on a curved surface. Any feedback on how I can properly implement this is very much appreciated.
Thank you,
Celine
-
January 27, 2023 at 7:57 am
DrAmine
Ansys EmployeeYou can use that Expression to plot it on the surface right away to verify if it is what you expect before even running.
You z varies over that surface the same with y. If you are doing a fit perhaps number of figures is important. if the have the data in tabaluted form (CSV) and spatial then you can aslo directly read a CSV file to apply it at the boundary.
-
January 27, 2023 at 3:34 pm
Celine Lim
SubscriberDr Amine,
You are right! I actually got the problem figured out, it was due to some mismatch in units. Thank you for taking the time to respond!
Celine
-
January 27, 2023 at 4:28 pm
DrAmine
Ansys EmployeeWelcome!
-
-
-
- The topic ‘Non-uniform heat flux boundary condition for a cylinder tube.’ is closed to new replies.
-
6450
-
1906
-
1457
-
1308
-
1022
© 2026 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.


