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Semi-Transparent Walls Boundary Condition

    • abs95
      Subscriber

      Hello I am trying to understand how the semi transparent wall boundary condition works. After reading the manual I did not get it much. Does it model the wall as the radiation source (left drawing)?. Or does it model the wall as the target of the incoming beam? (right drawing)

    • Karthik Remella
      Administrator
      Hello If you are using the Beam settings on a semi-transparent wall, your wall will be acting as the source (and not the target). All of the beam irradiation will originate from this semi-transparent wall.
      Karthik
    • gopalakrishna.gangisetty
      Subscriber

      Given that the temperature in the room is 298 K and the temperature in the surroundings is 278 K. In Ansys, I'm trying to move heat from the bottom room surface to the roof top using thermal radiation heat transfer and the Discrete ordinates approach. Furthermore, CO2 gas is present between the glass windows. 
      Bottom glass is made of two materials: simple window glass (opaque) and ZnS glass (semi-transparent). 
      The top glass is made of the same material as the bottom glass, but the Zns glass is positioned asymmetrically in relation to the bottom glass. 

      I'm trying to enter the following boundary conditions: My issue is as follows: 

      I can provide the internal emissivity at different wavelengths (which I have in my model) for the Opaque type.

      However, I am unable to provide internal emissivity for semi-transparent materials.

      However, I am unable to provide internal emissivity for semi-transparent types; instead, I must provide internal emissivity for ZnS glass, which has a transparency of 75%, emissivity of 25%, and reflection of zero. 

      Could someone please assist me with this? Where should I enter the ZnS glass properties? 

       

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