The simplistic energy transport support in compressibleTurbulenceModels has been
abstracted and separated into the new ThermophysicalTransportModels library in
order to provide a more general interface to support complex energy and specie
transport models, in particular multi-component diffusion. Currently only the
Fourier for laminar and eddyDiffusivity for RAS and LES turbulent flows are
provided but the interface is general and the set of models will be expanded in
the near future.
The ThermalDiffusivity and EddyDiffusivity modelling layers remain in
compressibleTurbulenceModels but will be removed shortly and the alphat boundary
conditions will be moved to ThermophysicalTransportModels.
Following the generalisation of the TurbulenceModels library to support
non-Newtonian laminar flow including visco-elasticity and extensible to other
form of non-Newtonian behaviour the name TurbulenceModels is misleading and does
not properly represent how general the OpenFOAM solvers now are. The
TurbulenceModels now provides an interface to momentum transport modelling in
general and the plan is to rename it MomentumTransportModels and in preparation
for this the turbulenceProperties dictionary has been renamed momentumTransport
to properly reflect its new more general purpose.
The old turbulenceProperties name is supported for backward-compatibility.
renaming the legacy keywords
RASModel -> model
LESModel -> model
laminarModel -> model
which is simpler and clear within the context in which they are specified, e.g.
RAS
{
model kOmegaSST;
turbulence on;
printCoeffs on;
}
rather than
RAS
{
RASModel kOmegaSST;
turbulence on;
printCoeffs on;
}
The old keywords are supported for backward compatibility.
This significant improvement is flexibility of SemiImplicitSource required a
generalisation of the source specification syntax and all tutorials have been
updated accordingly.
Description
Semi-implicit source, described using an input dictionary. The injection
rate coefficients are specified as pairs of Su-Sp coefficients, i.e.
\f[
S(x) = S_u + S_p x
\f]
where
\vartable
S(x) | net source for field 'x'
S_u | explicit source contribution
S_p | linearised implicit contribution
\endvartable
Example tabulated heat source specification for internal energy:
\verbatim
volumeMode absolute; // specific
sources
{
e
{
explicit table ((0 0) (1.5 $power));
implicit 0;
}
}
\endverbatim
Example coded heat source specification for enthalpy:
\verbatim
volumeMode absolute; // specific
sources
{
h
{
explicit
{
type coded;
name heatInjection;
code
#{
// Power amplitude
const scalar powerAmplitude = 1000;
// x is the current time
return mag(powerAmplitude*sin(x));
#};
}
implicit 0;
}
}
\endverbatim
The closeness option in surfaceFeatures set in surfaceFeaturesDict, e.g.
closeness
{
// Output the closeness of surface points to other surface elements.
pointCloseness yes;
}
calculates and writes both the internal and external surface "closeness"
measures either of which could be used to set the span refinement in
snappyHexMesh depending on which side of the surface is being meshed which is
specified with either refinement mode "insideSpan" or "externalSpan", e.g. in
the tutorials/mesh/snappyHexMesh/pipe case the inside of the pipe is meshed and
refined based on the internal span using the following specification:
refinementRegions
{
pipeWall
{
mode insideSpan;
levels ((1000 2));
cellsAcrossSpan 40;
}
}
Rather than specifying the controls per field it is simpler to use a single set
of controls for all the fields in the list and use separate instances of the
fieldAverage functionObject for different control sets:
Example of function object specification setting all the optional parameters:
fieldAverage1
{
type fieldAverage;
libs ("libfieldFunctionObjects.so");
writeControl writeTime;
restartOnRestart false;
restartOnOutput false;
periodicRestart false;
restartPeriod 0.002;
base time;
window 10.0;
windowName w1;
mean yes;
prime2Mean yes;
fields (U p);
}
This allows for a simple specification with the optional prime2Mean entry using
#includeFunc fieldAverage(U, p, prime2Mean = yes)
or if the prime2Mean is not needed just
#includeFunc fieldAverage(U, p)
To handle the additional optional specification for the closeness calculation
these settings are now is a sub-dictionary of surfaceFeaturesDict, e.g.
closeness
{
// Output the closeness of surface elements to other surface elements.
faceCloseness no;
// Output the closeness of surface points to other surface elements.
pointCloseness yes;
// Optional maximum angle between opposite points considered close
internalAngleTolerance 80;
externalAngleTolerance 80;
}
Description
PTT model for viscoelasticity using the upper-convected time
derivative of the stress tensor with support for multiple modes.
Reference:
\verbatim
Thien, N. P., & Tanner, R. I. (1977).
A new constitutive equation derived from network theory.
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 2(4), 353-365.
\endverbatim
Currently the common exponential form of the PTT model is provided but it could
easily be extended to also support the linear and quadratic forms if the need
arises.
The \ continuation line marker is no longer required, multi-line argument lists
are parsed naturally by searching for the end ), e.g. in
tutorials/multiphase/reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam/laminar/titaniaSynthesis/system/controlDict
#includeFunc writeObjects \
( \
d.particles, \
phaseTransfer:dmidtf.TiO2.particlesAndVapor \
)
is now written in the simpler form:
#includeFunc writeObjects
(
d.particles,
phaseTransfer:dmidtf.TiO2.particlesAndVapor
)
to support the more convenient #includeFunc specification in both
#includeFunc fieldAverage(U.air, U.water, alpha.air, p)
and
#includeFunc fieldAverage(fields = (U.air, U.water, alpha.air, p))
forms.
By specifying a list of coefficients in turbulenceProperties, e.g. for the
generalised Maxwell model:
modes
(
{
lambda 0.01;
}
{
lambda 0.04;
}
);
of for the generalised Giesekus model:
modes
(
{
lambda 0.01;
alphaG 0.05;
}
{
lambda 0.04;
alphaG 0.2;
}
);
Visco-elasticity stress tensors (sigma0, sigma1...) are solved for each mode and
summed to create the effective stress of the complex fluid:
Any number of modes can be specified and if only one mode is required the
'modes' entry is not read and the coefficients are obtained as before.
The mode sigma? fields are read if present otherwise are constructed and
initialised from the sigma field but all of the mode sigma? fields are written
for restart and the sigma field contains the sum.
References:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalized_Maxwell_model
Wiechert, E. (1889). Ueber elastische Nachwirkung.
(Doctoral dissertation, Hartungsche buchdr.).
Wiechert, E. (1893).
Gesetze der elastischen Nachwirkung für constante Temperatur.
Annalen der Physik, 286(11), 546-570.
The mean, prime2Mean and base now have default values:
{
mean on; // (default = on)
prime2Mean on; // (default = off)
base time; // time or iteration (default = time)
window 200; // optional averaging window
windowName w1; // optional window name (default = "")
}
so for the majority of cases for which these defaults are appropriate the
fieldAverage functionObject can now be specified in the functions entry in
controlDict thus:
functions
{
fieldAverage1
{
#includeEtc "caseDicts/postProcessing/fields/fieldAverage.cfg"
fields
(
U.air
U.water
alpha.air
p
);
}
}
also utilising the new fieldAverage.cfg file.
For cases in which these defaults are not appropriate, e.g. the prime2Mean is
also required the optional entries can be specified within sub-dictionaries for
each field, e.g.
fieldAverage1
{
#includeEtc "caseDicts/postProcessing/fields/fieldAverage.cfg"
fields
(
U
{
prime2Mean yes;
}
p
{
prime2Mean yes;
}
);
}
The hRefConst and eRefConst thermos that were local to
reacting*EulerFoam have been removed and the reference state that they
used has been incorporated into the standard hConst and eConst thermos.
The hConst thermo model now evaluates the enthalpy like so:
Ha = Hf + Hs
= Hf + Cp*(T - Tref) + Hsref (+ equation of state terms)
Where Ha is absolute enthalpy, Hs is sensible enthalpy, Cp is specific
heat at constant pressure, T is temperature, Tref is a reference
temperature and Hsref is a reference sensible enthalpy. Hf, Cp, Tref and
Hsref are user inputs. Of these, Tref and Hsref are new. An example
specification is as follows:
thermodynamics
{
Hf -1.34229e+07;
Cp 2078.4;
Tref 372.76;
Hsref 128652;
}
The ref quantities allows the user to specify a state around which to
linearise the relationship between temperature and enthalpy. This is
useful if the temperature range of the simulation is small enough to
consider the relationship linear, but linearity does not hold all the
way to standard conditions.
To maintain backwards compatibility, Tref defaults to standard
temperature, and Hsref defaults to zero, so a case using hConst thermo
requires no modification as a result of this change.
The only change to the default operation is that to calculate sensible
enthalpy Cp is multiplied by the difference between the current
temperature and the standard temperature, whether as previously Cp was
multiplied by the current temperature only. This means that at standard
conditions sensible enthalpy is now zero, and absolute enthalpy equals
the formation enthalpy. This is more consistent with the definitions of
the various enthalpies, and with other thermo models such as janaf. This
change should only affect reacting cases that use constant thermo
models.
A number of file name patterns have been removed from the list of things
that cleanCase deletes. Some patterns related to obsolete files that
OpenFOAM no longer generates, and some were deemed too generic to
delete as they might contain important persistent information.
This case is an updated version of
tutorials/multiphase/multiphaseEulerFoam/damBreak4phase using the latest models
available in reactingMultiphaseEulerFoam for interface capturing.
In multiphase systems it is only necessary to solve for all but one of the
moving phases. The new referencePhase option allows the user to specify which
of the moving phases should not be solved, e.g. in constant/phaseProperties of the
tutorials/multiphase/reactingMultiphaseEulerFoam/RAS/fluidisedBed tutorial case with
phases (particles air);
referencePhase air;
the particles phase is solved for and the air phase fraction and fluxes obtained
from the particles phase which provides equivalent behaviour to
reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam and is more efficient than solving for both phases.
For example in the new tutorial case:
tutorials/incompressible/pimpleFoam/laminar/pitzDailyPulse
a cosine bell velocity pulse is specified at the inlet by directly defining the
code for it:
inlet
{
type uniformFixedValue;
uniformValue coded;
name pulse;
codeInclude
#{
#include "mathematicalConstants.H"
#};
code
#{
return vector
(
0.5*(1 - cos(constant::mathematical::twoPi*min(x/0.3, 1))),
0,
0
);
#};
}
which is then compiled automatically and linked into the running pimpleFoam
dynamically and executed to set the inlet velocity.
e.g. in tutorials/incompressible/pisoFoam/LES/motorBike/motorBike/system/cuttingPlane
surfaceFormat vtk;
writeFormat binary;
fields (p U);
selects writing the VTK surface files in binary format which significantly
speeds-up reading of the files in paraview.
Currently binary writing is supported in VTK and EnSight formats.
In the new tutorial mesh/snappyHexMesh/pipe the pipe diameter changes by a factor
of 2 but the number of cells across the pipe is specified to be constant along
the length using the new "span" refinement mode in which the number of cells
across the span is set to be at least 40:
refinementRegions
{
pipe
{
mode span;
levels ((1000 2)); // Maximum distance and maximum level
cellsAcrossSpan 40;
}
}
This operates in conjunction with the "pointCloseness" option in surfaceFeatures
which writes a surfacePointScalarField of the local span of the domain. Note
that the behaviour of this option is critically dependent on the quality of this
field and the surface may need to be re-triangulated more isotropically to
ensure the "pointCloseness" is accurate and representative of the domain and the
required mesh distribution.
The calculation and input/output of transformations has been rewritten
for all coupled patches. This replaces multiple duplicated, inconsistent
and incomplete implementations of transformation handling which were
spread across the different coupled patch types.
Transformations are now calculated or specified once, typically during
mesh construction or manipulation, and are written out with the boundary
data. They are never re-calculated. Mesh changes should not change the
transformation across a coupled interface; to do so would violate the
transformation.
Transformations are now calculated using integral properties of the
patches. This is more numerically stable that the previous methods which
functioned in terms of individual faces. The new routines are also able
to automatically calculate non-zero centres of rotation.
The user input of transformations is backwards compatible, and permits
the user to manually specify varying amounts of the transformation
geometry. Anything left unspecified gets automatically computed from the
patch geometry. Supported specifications are:
1) No specification. Transformations on cyclics are automatically
generated, and cyclicAMI-type patches assume no transformation. For
example (in system/blockMeshDict):
cyclicLeft
{
type cyclic;
neighbourPatch cyclicRight;
faces ((0 1 2 3));
}
cyclicRight
{
type cyclic;
neighbourPatch cyclicLeft;
faces ((4 5 6 7));
}
2) Partial specification. The type of transformation is specified
by the user, as well as the coordinate system if the transform is
rotational. The rotation angle or separation vector is still
automatically generated. This form is useful as the signs of the
angle and separation are opposite on different sides of an interface
and can be difficult to specify correctly. For example:
cyclicLeft
{
type cyclic;
neighbourPatch cyclicRight;
transformType translational;
faces ((0 1 2 3));
}
cyclicRight
{
type cyclic;
neighbourPatch cyclicLeft;
transformType translational;
faces ((4 5 6 7));
}
cyclicAMILeft
{
type cyclicAMI;
neighbourPatch cyclicAMIRight;
transformType rotational;
rotationAxis (0 0 1);
rotationCentre (0.05 -0.01 0);
faces ((8 9 10 11));
}
cyclicAMIRight
{
type cyclicAMI;
neighbourPatch cyclicAMILeft;
transformType rotational;
rotationAxis (0 0 1);
rotationCentre (0.05 -0.01 0);
faces ((12 13 14 15));
}
3) Full specification. All parameters of the transformation are
given. For example:
cyclicLeft
{
type cyclic;
neighbourPatch cyclicRight;
transformType translational;
separaion (-0.01 0 0);
faces ((0 1 2 3));
}
cyclicRight
{
type cyclic;
neighbourPatch cyclicLeft;
transformType translational;
separaion (0.01 0 0);
faces ((4 5 6 7));
}
cyclicAMILeft
{
type cyclicAMI;
neighbourPatch cyclicAMIRight;
transformType rotational;
rotationAxis (0 0 1);
rotationCentre (0.05 -0.01 0);
rotationAngle 60;
faces ((8 9 10 11));
}
cyclicAMIRight
{
type cyclicAMI;
neighbourPatch cyclicAMILeft;
transformType rotational;
rotationAxis (0 0 1);
rotationCentre (0.05 -0.01 0);
rotationAngle 60;
faces ((12 13 14 15));
}
Automatic ordering of faces and points across coupled patches has also
been rewritten, again replacing multiple unsatisfactory implementations.
The new ordering method is more robust on poor meshes as it
geometrically matches only a single face (per contiguous region of the
patch) in order to perform the ordering, and this face is chosen to be
the one with the highest quality. A failure in ordering now only occurs
if the best face in the patch cannot be geometrically matched, whether
as previously the worst face could cause the algorithm to fail.
The oldCyclicPolyPatch has been removed, and the mesh converters which
previously used it now all generate ordered cyclic and baffle patches
directly. This removes the need to run foamUpgradeCyclics after
conversion. In addition the fluent3DMeshToFoam converter now supports
conversion of periodic/shadow pairs to OpenFOAM cyclic patches.
The thermal phase system now operates with saturation models specified
per phase-pair, and can therefore represent multiple transfer processes
across different interfaces. There is no longer a "phaseChange" switch;
instead the selection of a saturation model for a given interface
enables phase change across that interface. This includes both
interfacial phase change and nucleate wall boiling.
Both interfacial phase change and wall boiling models now include
support for there being a single specified volatile component which
undergoes phase change.
A correction has been made to the phase change energy transfer when only
interfacial phase change is enabled.
The thermal phase change tutorials have all been updated to reflect
these changes in the user interface.
Patch contributed by Juho Peltola, VTT.
The kOmegaSSTSata model can now be used in multiphase cases, provided
that there is a single, well defined continuous phase. As previously,
the continuous phase is the phase for which the model is selected (i.e.,
in the constant/turbulenceProperties.<continuous-phase-name>
dictionary).
By default, now, all other moving phases are considered to be dispersed
bubble phases, and the effect of all of them is summed to calculate the
overall bubble induced turbulence.
This behaviour can be overridden by means of a "dispersedPhases" entry,
which takes a list of the phases to be considered dispersed by the
model.
Patch contributed by Timo Niemi, VTT.
All of the film transport equations are now formulated with respect to the film
volume fraction in the region cell layer rather than the film thickness which
ensures mass conservation of the film even as it flows over curved surfaces and
around corners. (In the previous formulation the conservation error could be as
large as 15% for a film flowing around a corner.)
The film Courant number is now formulated in terms of the film cell volumetric
flux which avoids the stabilised division by the film thickness and provides a
more reliable estimate for time-step evaluation. As a consequence the film
solution is substantially more robust even though the time-step is now
significantly higher. For film flow dominated problem the simulations now runs
10-30x faster.
The inconsistent extended PISO controls have been replaced by the standard
PIMPLE control system used in all other flow solvers, providing consistent
input, a flexible structure and easier maintenance.
The momentum corrector has been re-formulated to be consistent with the momentum
predictor so the optional PIMPLE outer-corrector loop converges which it did not
previously.
nonuniformTransformCyclic patches and corresponding fields are no longer needed
and have been removed which paves the way for a future rationalisation of the
handling of cyclic transformations in OpenFOAM to improve robustness, usability
and maintainability.
Film sources have been simplified to avoid the need for fictitious boundary
conditions, in particular mappedFixedPushedInternalValueFvPatchField which has
been removed.
Film variables previously appended with an "f" for "film" rather than "face"
have been renamed without the unnecessary and confusing "f" as they are
localised to the film region and hence already directly associated with it.
All film tutorials have been updated to test and demonstrate the developments
and improvements listed above.
Henry G. Weller
CFD Direct Ltd.
The update of mass transfer rates in the population balance system is
now done at the same time as other source terms. This benefits
synchronisation of the mass transfer rate and the source terms and
prevents the system converging to an incorrect state.
Patch contributed by VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd and
Institute of Fluid Dynamics, Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf (HZDR).
In order to improve stability and robustness of fluidised bed cases the
semi-implicit treatment of the particle pressure (pPrime) is now applied within
the time-step sub-cycling along with the phase differential flux update. This
allows the simulations to be performed reliably at a significantly increased
maximum Courant number (up to 5 for some cases) without introducing
chequerboarding patterns in regions of low particle phase fraction which
occurred with the previous algorithm.
The fluidisedBed tutorial has been updated to be more representative of real
bubbling bed cases and to demonstrate the new pPrime functionality.
Developed in collaboration with Timo Niemi, VTT.
These cases now check for a mesh in geometrically identical cases and
copy rather than re-generate if possible. This reduces the run-time of
the test loop by about 20 minutes.
A surface geometry file should be stored in
$FOAM_TUTORIALS/resources/geometry if it is used in multiple cases,
otherwise it should be stored locally to the case. This change enforces
that across all tutorials.
An adsorption condition has been added for species mass fraction. This
models a surface on which one or more species deposit at a rate
proportional to the quantity of that specie present. The property that
the rate is assumed proportional to can be chosen to be mass fraction,
mole fraction, molar concentration, or partial pressure.
Example specification in 0/CH4, 0/O2, etc...:
<patchName>
{
type adsorptionMassFraction;
property molarConcentration;
c 1e-3; // <-- Transfer coefficient
value $internalField;
}
"c" is the constant of proportionality between the property value and
the mass transfer rate. If a specie does not adsorb, this should be set
to zero, or be omitted entirely.
This condition must be supplied for all species, and corresponding
specie transfer boundary conditions must also be applied to velocity and
temperature.
Example specification in 0/U and 0/T:
<patchName>
{
type specieTransferVelocity;
value $internalField;
}
<patchName>
{
type specieTransferTemperature;
value $internalField;
}
In addition, the semi-permeable baffle conditions have been refactored
to share functionality with the new adsorption conditions. They can now
also be used with the species-transfer temperature condition, which
corrects an energy error that was present previously. The parameter
"input" has been renamed "property", consistently with the adsorption
entries listed above. Molar concentration has also been added as an
option for the property driving the transfer, so the available controls
are the same as for adsorption.
Example specification in 0/CH4, 0/O2, etc...:
<patchName>
{
type semiPermeableBaffleMassFraction;
samplePatch <neighbourPatchName>;
property molarConcentration;
c 1e-3; // <-- Transfer coefficient
value $internalField;
}
<neighbourPatchName>
{
type semiPermeableBaffleMassFraction;
samplePatch <patchName>;
property molarConcentration;
c 1e-3; // <-- Transfer coefficient
value $internalField;
}
Velocity and temperature conditions should be set in the same way as for
adsorption.
In order for the temperature condition to function satisfactorily and
not introduce unphysical variations in temperature as a result of the
linearisation to an energy boundary condition, two new base classes for
temperature conditions which explicitly set the parameters of either
gradient or mixed energy conditions have been added. The mixed condition
forms the base of the specieTransferTemperature condition.
As a result of its generalisation, the library has been renamed from
"libsemiPermeableBaffle.so" to "libspecieTransfer.so".
derived from solidThermo. This allows the standard heat transfer boundary
conditions, for example externalWallHeatFluxTemperature, to be used with
solidDisplacementFoam and also significantly simplifies the code.
Additionally solidDisplacementFoam and solidEquilibriumDisplacementFoam have
been updated to handle spatially varying physical properties in a conservative
manner both for the stress and heat transfer. This means that the stress field
sigma is now dynamic rather than kinematic as it was previously. For uniform
property fields the behaviour of the solvers is the same as it was before this
update.
This part of the name is unnecessary, as it is clear from context that
the name refers to a reaction. The selector has been made backwards
compatible so that old names will still read successfuly.
Reaction names are now consistently camel-cased for readability. Most
names have not been affected because the reaction rate name is a proper
noun and is therefore already capitalised (e.g., Arrhenius, Janev,
Landau, etc ...). Reactions that have been affected are as follows.
Old name New name
irreversibleinfiniteReaction irreversibleInfiniteReaction
irreversiblepowerSeriesReaction irreversiblePowerSeriesReaction
irreversiblethirdBodyArrheniusReaction irreversibleThirdBodyArrheniusReaction
nonEquilibriumReversibleinfiniteReaction nonEquilibriumReversibleInfiniteReaction
nonEquilibriumReversiblethirdBodyArrheniusReaction nonEquilibriumReversibleThirdBodyArrheniusReaction
reversibleinfiniteReaction reversibleInfiniteReaction
reversiblepowerSeriesReaction reversiblePowerSeriesReaction
reversiblethirdBodyArrheniusReaction reversibleThirdBodyArrheniusReaction
irreversiblefluxLimitedLangmuirHinshelwoodReaction irreversibleFluxLimitedLangmuirHinshelwoodReaction
irreversiblesurfaceArrheniusReaction irreversibleSurfaceArrheniusReaction
reversiblesurfaceArrheniusReaction reversibleSurfaceArrheniusReaction