Commit Graph

51 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
476bb42b04 unitConversion: Unit conversions on all input parameters
The majority of input parameters now support automatic unit conversion.
Units are specified within square brackets, either before or after the
value. Primitive parameters (e.g., scalars, vectors, tensors, ...),
dimensioned types, fields, Function1-s and Function2-s all support unit
conversion in this way.

Unit conversion occurs on input only. OpenFOAM writes out all fields and
parameters in standard units. It is recommended to use '.orig' files in
the 0 directory to preserve user-readable input if those files are being
modified by pre-processing applications (e.g., setFields).

For example, to specify a volumetric flow rate inlet boundary in litres
per second [l/s], rather than metres-cubed per second [m^3/s], in 0/U:

    boundaryField
    {
        inlet
        {
            type            flowRateInletVelocity;
            volumetricFlowRate 0.1 [l/s];
            value           $internalField;
        }

        ...
    }

Or, to specify the pressure field in bar, in 0/p:

    internalField   uniform 1 [bar];

Or, to convert the parameters of an Arrhenius reaction rate from a
cm-mol-kcal unit system, in constant/chemistryProperties:

    reactions
    {
        methaneReaction
        {
            type    irreversibleArrhenius;
            reaction "CH4^0.2 + 2O2^1.3 = CO2 + 2H2O";
            A       6.7e12 [(mol/cm^3)^-0.5/s];
            beta    0;
            Ea      48.4 [kcal/mol];
        }
    }

Or, to define a time-varying outlet pressure using a CSV file in which
the pressure column is in mega-pascals [MPa], in 0/p:

    boundaryField
    {
        outlet
        {
            type            uniformFixedValue;
            value
            {
                type            table;
                format          csv;
                nHeaderLine     1;
                units           ([s] [MPa]); // <-- new units entry
                columns         (0 1);
                mergeSeparators no;
                file            "data/pressure.csv";
                outOfBounds     clamp;
                interpolationScheme linear;
            }
        }

        ...
    }

(Note also that a new 'columns' entry replaces the old 'refColumn' and
'componentColumns'. This is is considered to be more intuitive, and has
a consistent syntax with the new 'units' entry. 'columns' and
'componentColumns' have been retained for backwards compatibility and
will continue to work for the time being.)

Unit definitions can be added in the global or case controlDict files.
See UnitConversions in $WM_PROJECT_DIR/etc/controlDict for examples.
Currently available units include:

    Standard: kg m s K kmol A Cd

     Derived: Hz N Pa J W g um mm cm km l ml us ms min hr mol
              rpm bar atm kPa MPa cal kcal cSt cP % rad rot deg

A user-time unit is also provided if user-time is in operation. This
allows it to be specified locally whether a parameter relates to
real-time or to user-time. For example, to define a mass source that
ramps up from a given engine-time (in crank-angle-degrees [CAD]) over a
duration in real-time, in constant/fvModels:

    massSource1
    {
        type        massSource;
        points      ((1 2 3));
        massFlowRate
        {
            type        scale;
            scale       linearRamp;
            start       20 [CAD];
            duration    50 [ms];
            value       0.1 [g/s];
        }
    }

Specified units will be checked against the parameter's dimensions where
possible, and an error generated if they are not consistent. For the
dimensions to be available for this check, the code requires
modification, and work propagating this change across OpenFOAM is
ongoing. Unit conversions are still possible without these changes, but
the validity of such conversions will not be checked.

Units are no longer permitted in 'dimensions' entries in field files.
These 'dimensions' entries can now, instead, take the names of
dimensions. The names of the available dimensions are:

    Standard: mass length time temperature
              moles current luminousIntensity

     Derived: area volume rate velocity momentum acceleration density
              force energy power pressure kinematicPressure
              compressibility gasConstant specificHeatCapacity
              kinematicViscosity dynamicViscosity thermalConductivity
              volumetricFlux massFlux

So, for example, a 0/epsilon file might specify the dimensions as
follows:

    dimensions      [energy/mass/time];

And a 0/alphat file might have:

    dimensions      [thermalConductivity/specificHeatCapacity];

*** Development Notes ***

A unit conversion can construct trivially from a dimension set,
resulting in a "standard" unit with a conversion factor of one. This
means the functions which perform unit conversion on read can be
provided dimension sets or unit conversion objects interchangeably.

A basic `dict.lookup<vector>("Umean")` call will do unit conversion, but
it does not know the parameter's dimensions, so it cannot check the
validity of the supplied units. A corresponding lookup function has been
added in which the dimensions or units can be provided; in this case the
corresponding call would be `dict.lookup<vector>("Umean", dimVelocity)`.
This function enables additional checking and should be used wherever
possible.

Function1-s and Function2-s have had their constructors and selectors
changed so that dimensions/units must be specified by calling code. In
the case of Function1, two unit arguments must be given; one for the
x-axis and one for the value-axis. For Function2-s, three must be
provided.

In some cases, it is desirable (or at least established practice), that
a given non-standard unit be used in the absence of specific
user-defined units. Commonly this includes reading angles in degrees
(rather than radians) and reading times in user-time (rather than
real-time). The primitive lookup functions and Function1 and Function2
selectors both support specifying a non-standard default unit. For
example, `theta_ = dict.lookup<scalar>("theta", unitDegrees)` will read
an angle in degrees by default. If this is done within a model which
also supports writing then the write call must be modified accordingly
so that the data is also written out in degrees. Overloads of writeEntry
have been created for this purpose. In this case, the angle theta should
be written out with `writeEntry(os, "theta", unitDegrees, theta_)`.
Function1-s and Function2-s behave similarly, but with greater numbers
of dimensions/units arguments as before.

The non-standard user-time unit can be accessed by a `userUnits()`
method that has been added to Time. Use of this user-time unit in the
construction of Function1-s should prevent the need for explicit
user-time conversion in boundary conditions and sub-models and similar.

Some models might contain non-typed stream-based lookups of the form
`dict.lookup("p0") >> p0_` (e.g., in a re-read method), or
`Umean_(dict.lookup("Umean"))` (e.g., in an initialiser list). These
calls cannot facilitate unit conversion and are therefore discouraged.
They should be replaced with
`p0_ = dict.lookup<scalar>("p0", dimPressure)` and
`Umean_(dict.lookup<vector>("Umean", dimVelocity))` and similar whenever
they are found.
2024-05-16 09:01:46 +01:00
2bc91ecff0 phaseScalarTransport: Improved interface and documentation
This function now looks up an alphaPhi field by default and exits with
an error if the field cannot be found. In order to solve for alphaPhi a
new 'solveAlphaPhi' switch has to be set.

The documentation has been updated to reflect the fact that the VoF
solvers now store all the alphaPhi fluxes necessary for a in-phase
equation to be constructed.

The phaseScalarTransport function has been added to the damBreakLaminar
tutorial.
2023-12-06 12:54:33 +00:00
597121a4a7 multiphaseEuler: Library reorganisation
This change makes multiphaseEuler more consistent with other modules and
makes its sub-libraries less inter-dependent. Some left-over references
to multiphaseEulerFoam have also been removed.
2023-09-15 14:45:26 +01:00
618d9d33b2 controlDict: the optional graphFormat entry is now used as the default for all setFormat entries
Foam::graph superseded by the more general Foam::setWriter reducing code
maintenance overhead, simplifying usage and further development.
2023-06-12 17:14:37 +01:00
5d55e0483d functionObjects::phaseScalarTransport: Corrected member data documentation 2023-01-28 10:15:15 +00:00
2da6c4cc62 functionObjects::scalarTransport: diffusion -> diffusivity
It in more logical to name the diffusivity entry, types and variables
"diffusivity" rather than "diffusion".
2023-01-27 14:49:01 +00:00
8de6cd744e solvers::functions: New solver module to execute functionObjects in a time-loop
Description
    Solver module to execute the \c functionObjects for a specified solver

    The solver specified by either the \c subSolver or if not present the \c
    solver entry in the \c controlDict is instantiated to provide the physical
    fields needed by the \c functionObjects.  The \c functionObjects are then
    instantiated from the specifications are read from the \c functions entry in
    the \c controlDict and executed in a time-loop also controlled by entries in
    \c controlDict and the \c maxDeltaT() returned by the sub-solver.

    The fields and other objects registered by the sub-solver are set to
    NO_WRITE as they are not changed by the execution of the functionObjects and
    should not be written out each write-time.  Fields and other objects created
    and changed by the execution of the functionObjects are written out.

solvers::functions in conjunction with the scalarTransport functionObject
replaces scalarTransportFoam and provide more general handling of the scalar
diffusivity.
2023-01-27 14:31:58 +00:00
ed7e703040 Time::timeName(): no longer needed, calls replaced by name()
The timeName() function simply returns the dimensionedScalar::name() which holds
the user-time name of the current time and now that timeName() is no longer
virtual the dimensionedScalar::name() can be called directly.  The timeName()
function implementation is maintained for backward-compatibility.
2022-11-30 15:53:51 +00:00
366e38d34a compressibleVoF: Consolidated library functionality 2022-11-16 20:54:40 +00:00
4bd90bc969 rhoThermo: Renamed thermo:rho -> rho
The thermodynamic density field is now named "rho" by default and only renamed
"thermo:rho" by solvers that create and maintain a separate continuity density
field which is named "rho".  This change significantly simplifies and
standardises the specification of schemes and boundary conditions requiring
density as it is now always named "rho" or "rho.<phase>" unless under some very
unusual circumstances the thermodynamic rather than continuity density is
required for a solver maintaining both.

The advantage of this change is particularly noticeable for multiphase
simulations in which each phase has its own density now named "rho.<phase>"
rather than "thermo:rho.<phase>" as separate phase continuity density fields are
not required so for multiphaseEulerFoam the scheme specification:

    "div\(alphaRhoPhi.*,\(p\|thermo:rho.*\)\)" Gauss limitedLinear 1;

is now written:

    "div\(alphaRhoPhi.*,\(p\|rho.*\)\)" Gauss limitedLinear 1;
2022-10-28 02:19:13 +01:00
5af5413542 thermophysicalTransportModel: New abstract base-class for all thermophysical transport
the new fluidThermophysicalTransportModel and solidThermophysicalTransportModel
are derived from thermophysicalTransportModel providing a consistent and unified
interface for heat transport within and between regions.  Coupled and external
heat-transfer boundary conditions can now be written independent of the
thermophysical properties or transport modelling of the regions providing
greater flexibility, simpler code and reduces the maintenance overhead.
2022-10-23 04:13:52 +01:00
4fb68fa0db functionObjects::scalarTransport: Updated handling of the schemesField option
The schemesField option:

    - To employ the same numerical schemes as another field set
      the \c schemesField entry,

works to set discretisation schemes and a standard linear solver and settings
but not MULES for which an entry in fvSolution under the actual field name is
required.
2022-07-19 08:48:45 +01:00
c907405f4a Merge branch 'master' of github.com-OpenFOAM:OpenFOAM/OpenFOAM-dev 2022-07-18 19:08:55 +01:00
5ca7b11b7d functionObjects::scalarTransport: Set fluxRequired for the scalar when semi-implicit MULES is used 2022-07-18 19:07:34 +01:00
f02d6d33c8 Corrected typo 2022-07-18 17:40:16 +01:00
910b174871 Corrected typo 2022-07-18 17:26:20 +01:00
ddbf2d7853 fvMesh: fvSchemes and fvSolution are now demand-driven
fvMesh is no longer derived from fvSchemes and fvSolution, these are now
demand-driven and accessed by the member functions schemes() and solution()
respectively.  This means that the system/fvSchemes and system/fvSolution files
are no longer required during fvMesh constructions simplifying the mesh
generation and manipulation phase; theses files are read on the first call of
their access functions.

The fvSchemes member function names have also been simplified taking advantage
of the context in which they are called, for example

    mesh.ddtScheme(fieldName) -> mesh.schemes().ddt(fieldName)
2022-03-23 16:23:55 +00:00
aa6c04a43a functionObjects::scalarTransport: Added support for MULES with sub-cycling and semi-implicit options
Description
    Evolves a passive scalar transport equation.

    - To specify the field name set the \c field entry
    - To employ the same numerical schemes as another field set
      the \c schemesField entry,
    - The \c diffusivity entry can be set to \c none, \c constant, \c viscosity
    - A constant diffusivity is specified with the \c D entry,
    - If a momentum transport model is available and the \c viscosity
      diffusivety option specified an effective diffusivity may be constructed
      from the laminar and turbulent viscosities using the diffusivity
      coefficients \c alphal and \c alphat:
      \verbatim
          D = alphal*nu + alphat*nut
      \endverbatim

    Example:
    \verbatim
        #includeFunc scalarTransport(T, alphaD=1, alphaDt=1)
    \endverbatim

    For incompressible flow the passive scalar may optionally be solved with the
    MULES limiter and sub-cycling or semi-implicit in order to maintain
    boundedness, particularly if a compressive, PLIC or MPLIC convection
    scheme is used.

    Example:
    \verbatim
        #includeFunc scalarTransport(tracer, diffusion=none)

    with scheme specification:
        div(phi,tracer)     Gauss interfaceCompression vanLeer 1;

    and solver specification:
        tracer
        {
            nCorr      1;
            nSubCycles 3;

            MULESCorr       no;
            nLimiterIter    5;
            applyPrevCorr   yes;

            solver          smoothSolver;
            smoother        symGaussSeidel;
            tolerance       1e-8;
            relTol          0;

            diffusion
            {
                solver          smoothSolver;
                smoother        symGaussSeidel;
                tolerance       1e-8;
                relTol          0;
            }
        }
    \endverbatim
2021-10-27 16:01:46 +01:00
c01118589f functionObjects: Added fields() function to provide list of required fields to postProcess
With this change each functionObject provides the list of fields required so
that the postProcess utility can pre-load them before executing the list of
functionObjects.  This provides a more convenient interface than using the
-field or -fields command-line options to postProcess which are now redundant.
2021-10-21 09:23:34 +01:00
65ef2cf331 physicalProperties: Standardised incompressible and compressible solver fluid properties
to provide a single consistent code and user interface to the specification of
physical properties in both single-phase and multi-phase solvers.  This redesign
simplifies usage and reduces code duplication in run-time selectable solver
options such as 'functionObjects' and 'fvModels'.

* physicalProperties
  Single abstract base-class for all fluid and solid physical property classes.

  Physical properties for a single fluid or solid within a region are now read
  from the 'constant/<region>/physicalProperties' dictionary.

  Physical properties for a phase fluid or solid within a region are now read
  from the 'constant/<region>/physicalProperties.<phase>' dictionary.

  This replaces the previous inconsistent naming convention of
  'transportProperties' for incompressible solvers and
  'thermophysicalProperties' for compressible solvers.

  Backward-compatibility is provided by the solvers reading
  'thermophysicalProperties' or 'transportProperties' if the
  'physicalProperties' dictionary does not exist.

* phaseProperties
  All multi-phase solvers (VoF and Euler-Euler) now read the list of phases and
  interfacial models and coefficients from the
  'constant/<region>/phaseProperties' dictionary.

  Backward-compatibility is provided by the solvers reading
  'thermophysicalProperties' or 'transportProperties' if the 'phaseProperties'
  dictionary does not exist.  For incompressible VoF solvers the
  'transportProperties' is automatically upgraded to 'phaseProperties' and the
  two 'physicalProperties.<phase>' dictionary for the phase properties.

* viscosity
  Abstract base-class (interface) for all fluids.

  Having a single interface for the viscosity of all types of fluids facilitated
  a substantial simplification of the 'momentumTransport' library, avoiding the
  need for a layer of templating and providing total consistency between
  incompressible/compressible and single-phase/multi-phase laminar, RAS and LES
  momentum transport models.  This allows the generalised Newtonian viscosity
  models to be used in the same form within laminar as well as RAS and LES
  momentum transport closures in any solver.  Strain-rate dependent viscosity
  modelling is particularly useful with low-Reynolds number turbulence closures
  for non-Newtonian fluids where the effect of bulk shear near the walls on the
  viscosity is a dominant effect.  Within this framework it would also be
  possible to implement generalised Newtonian models dependent on turbulent as
  well as mean strain-rate if suitable model formulations are available.

* visosityModel
  Run-time selectable Newtonian viscosity model for incompressible fluids
  providing the 'viscosity' interface for 'momentumTransport' models.

  Currently a 'constant' Newtonian viscosity model is provided but the structure
  supports more complex functions of time, space and fields registered to the
  region database.

  Strain-rate dependent non-Newtonian viscosity models have been removed from
  this level and handled in a more general way within the 'momentumTransport'
  library, see section 'viscosity' above.

  The 'constant' viscosity model is selected in the 'physicalProperties'
  dictionary by

      viscosityModel  constant;

  which is equivalent to the previous entry in the 'transportProperties'
  dictionary

      transportModel  Newtonian;

  but backward-compatibility is provided for both the keyword and model
  type.

* thermophysicalModels
  To avoid propagating the unnecessary constructors from 'dictionary' into the
  new 'physicalProperties' abstract base-class this entire structure has been
  removed from the 'thermophysicalModels' library.  The only use for this
  constructor was in 'thermalBaffle' which now reads the 'physicalProperties'
  dictionary from the baffle region directory which is far simpler and more
  consistent and significantly reduces the amount of constructor code in the
  'thermophysicalModels' library.

* compressibleInterFoam
  The creation of the 'viscosity' interface for the 'momentumTransport' models
  allows the complex 'twoPhaseMixtureThermo' derived from 'rhoThermo' to be
  replaced with the much simpler 'compressibleTwoPhaseMixture' derived from the
  'viscosity' interface, avoiding the myriad of unused thermodynamic functions
  required by 'rhoThermo' to be defined for the mixture.

  Same for 'compressibleMultiphaseMixture' in 'compressibleMultiphaseInterFoam'.

This is a significant improvement in code and input consistency, simplifying
maintenance and further development as well as enhancing usability.

Henry G. Weller
CFD Direct Ltd.
2021-07-30 17:19:54 +01:00
8a5ee8aac1 MomentumTransportModels: Library builds of multiphase models
The MomentumTransportModels library now builds of a standard set of
phase-incompressible and phase-compressible models. This replaces most
solver-specific builds of these models.

This has been made possible by the addition of a new
"dynamicTransportModel" interface, from which all transport classes used
by the momentum transport models now derive. For the purpose of
disambiguation, the old "transportModel" has also been renamed
"kinematicTransportModel".

This change has been made in order to create a consistent definition of
phase-incompressible and phase-compressible MomentumTransportModels,
which can then be looked up by functionObjects, fvModels, and similar.

Some solvers still build specific momentum transport models, but these
are now in addition to the standard set. The solver does not build all
the models it uses.

There are also corresponding centralised builds of phase dependent
ThermophysicalTransportModels.
2021-03-30 13:27:20 +01:00
da3f4cc92e fvModels, fvConstraints: Rational separation of fvOptions between physical modelling and numerical constraints
The new fvModels is a general interface to optional physical models in the
finite volume framework, providing sources to the governing conservation
equations, thus ensuring consistency and conservation.  This structure is used
not only for simple sources and forces but also provides a general run-time
selection interface for more complex models such as radiation and film, in the
future this will be extended to Lagrangian, reaction, combustion etc.  For such
complex models the 'correct()' function is provided to update the state of these
models at the beginning of the PIMPLE loop.

fvModels are specified in the optional constant/fvModels dictionary and
backward-compatibility with fvOption is provided by reading the
constant/fvOptions or system/fvOptions dictionary if present.

The new fvConstraints is a general interface to optional numerical constraints
applied to the matrices of the governing equations after construction and/or to
the resulting field after solution.  This system allows arbitrary changes to
either the matrix or solution to ensure numerical or other constraints and hence
violates consistency with the governing equations and conservation but it often
useful to ensure numerical stability, particularly during the initial start-up
period of a run.  Complex manipulations can be achieved with fvConstraints, for
example 'meanVelocityForce' used to maintain a specified mean velocity in a
cyclic channel by manipulating the momentum matrix and the velocity solution.

fvConstraints are specified in the optional system/fvConstraints dictionary and
backward-compatibility with fvOption is provided by reading the
constant/fvOptions or system/fvOptions dictionary if present.

The separation of fvOptions into fvModels and fvConstraints provides a rational
and consistent separation between physical and numerical models which is easier
to understand and reason about, avoids the confusing issue of location of the
controlling dictionary file, improves maintainability and easier to extend to
handle current and future requirements for optional complex physical models and
numerical constraints.
2021-03-07 22:45:01 +00:00
def4772281 Documentation: Centred the Class Declaration comment
Patch contributed by Institute of Fluid Dynamics,
Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf (HZDR)
2020-08-28 13:28:58 +01:00
9ff320a8da multiphaseEulerFoam: Updated documentation 2020-07-30 12:30:26 +01:00
68e4678221 reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam: Replaced by multiphaseEulerFoam
The reactingtTwoPhaseEulerFoam solver has been replaced by the more general
multiphaseEulerFoam solver which supports two-phase and multiphase systems
containing fluid and stationary phases, compressible or incompressible, with
heat and mass transfer, reactions, size distribution and all the usual phase
interaction and transfer models.

All reactingtTwoPhaseEulerFoam tutorials have been ported to multiphaseEulerFoam
to demonstrate two-phase capability with a wide range of phase and
phase-interaction models.

When running with two-phases the optional referencePhase entry in
phaseProperties can be used to specify which phase fraction should not be
solved, providing compatibility with reactingtTwoPhaseEulerFoam, see

tutorials/multiphase/multiphaseEulerFoam/RAS/fluidisedBed
tutorials/multiphase/multiphaseEulerFoam/laminar/bubbleColumn

for examples.
2020-07-17 20:18:15 +01:00
de66b1be68 MomentumTransportModels: Update of the TurbulenceModels library for all flow types
providing the shear-stress term in the momentum equation for incompressible and
compressible Newtonian, non-Newtonian and visco-elastic laminar flow as well as
Reynolds averaged and large-eddy simulation of turbulent flow.

The general deviatoric shear-stress term provided by the MomentumTransportModels
library is named divDevTau for compressible flow and divDevSigma (sigma =
tau/rho) for incompressible flow, the spherical part of the shear-stress is
assumed to be either included in the pressure or handled separately.  The
corresponding stress function sigma is also provided which in the case of
Reynolds stress closure returns the effective Reynolds stress (including the
laminar contribution) or for other Reynolds averaged or large-eddy turbulence
closures returns the modelled Reynolds stress or sub-grid stress respectively.
For visco-elastic flow the sigma function returns the effective total stress
including the visco-elastic and Newtonian contributions.

For thermal flow the heat-flux generated by thermal diffusion is now handled by
the separate ThermophysicalTransportModels library allowing independent run-time
selection of the heat-flux model.

During the development of the MomentumTransportModels library significant effort
has been put into rationalising the components and supporting libraries,
removing redundant code, updating names to provide a more logical, consistent
and extensible interface and aid further development and maintenance.  All
solvers and tutorials have been updated correspondingly and backward
compatibility of the input dictionaries provided.

Henry G. Weller
CFD Direct Ltd.
2020-04-14 20:44:22 +01:00
7f5144312e Renamed turbulenceProperties -> momentumTransport
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.
2020-04-10 17:17:37 +01:00
1bbac95448 objectRegistry: Improvements to caching of temporary objects
Cached temporary objects are now registered from the moment of
construction. This means it is possible to use them before they go out
of scope. Non-cached temporaries are not registered, as before.

The check for the existence of requested cached objects is now done
after function object evaluation. This means that caching can be done on
fields generated by the function objects themselves without generating
warning messages.

The above, however, means that if an object isn't successfully cached
and it's lookup in a function fails, then the warning will not be
generated before the lookup raises an error. This could make diagnosing
the reason for such a failure more difficult. To remedy this the content
of the warning (i.e., the list of objects that are available for
caching) has been added to the lookup error message if the looked up
name is on the caching list. The same level of logged information is
therefore retained in the event of caching and lookup failures.
2019-09-30 16:32:39 +01:00
9bcbaea4a3 functionObjects::scalarTransport/phaseScalarTransport: Use int for the corrector loop
rather than label.
2019-07-15 22:29:10 +01:00
5c188ddce7 Completed standardisation of the class declaration section comments to correspond to the foamNewSource template 2019-06-21 22:45:47 +01:00
8e9f692aa4 Standardised the class declaration section comments to correspond to the foamNewSource template 2019-06-13 21:26:33 +01:00
fc4d7b92c3 Corrected documentation comment for disabled copy constructors 2019-05-29 15:58:42 +01:00
9140984cf4 Added "= delete" to disabled bitwise copy constructors and assignment operators
Currently these deleted function declarations are still in the private section
of the class declarations but will be moved by hand to the public section over
time as this is too complex to automate reliably.
2019-05-28 15:26:45 +01:00
4519f47ab8 phasesScalarTransport: Corrected compressible fvOptions usage 2019-03-15 08:49:39 +00:00
4f3c3eaab1 functionObjects: phaseScalarTransport: Made writing of alpha*s switchable 2019-02-18 15:20:40 +00:00
a86fe1f3ac functionObjects: phaseScalarTransport: Solution control update 2019-02-15 16:55:18 +00:00
7b1840c7d3 functionObjects: Added phaseScalarTransport function
This is like the scalarTrasport function except that the transported
scalar is confined to a single phase of a multiphase simulation. In
addition to the usual specification for the scalarTransport function
(i.e., a field, schemes and solution parameters), the user needs to
specify the phase-flux or a pressure field which can be used to generate
it.

Example usage for interFoam:

    phaseScalarTransport1
    {
        type            phaseScalarTransport;
        libs            ("libsolverFunctionObjects.so");

        field           s.water;
        p               p_rgh;
    }

Example usage for reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam:

    phaseScalarTransport1
    {
        type            phaseScalarTransport;
        libs            ("libsolverFunctionObjects.so");

        field           s.water;
        alphaPhi        alphaRhoPhi.water;
        rho             thermo:rho.water;
    }

The function will write out both the per-unit-phase field that is solved
for (s.water in the above examples) and also the mixture-total field
(alphaS.water), which is often more convenient for post-processing.
2019-02-15 10:56:33 +00:00
819eb06657 src: Changed tmp<volField> construction to use the new simpler "New" method
avoiding unnecessary database registration of temporary fields
2018-12-21 07:14:52 +00:00
6faadcb45c Removed the unnecessary ".0" from dimensionedScalar constructors 2018-12-19 14:24:41 +00:00
ee443e201f Rationalised the handling of "Final" solver and relaxation factor settings
Now for transient simulations "Final" solver settings are required for ALL
equations providing consistency between the solution of velocity, energy,
composition and radiation properties.

However "Final" relaxation factors are no longer required for fields or
equations and if not present the standard value for the variable will be
applied.  Given that relaxation factors other than 1 are rarely required for
transient runs and hence the same for all iterations including the final one
this approach provide simpler input while still providing the flexibility to
specify a different value for the final iteration if required.  For steady cases
it is usual to execute just 1 outer iteration per time-step for which the
standard relaxation factors are appropriate, and if more than one iteration is
executed it is common to use the same factors for both.  In the unlikely event
of requiring different relaxation factors for the final iteration this is still
possible to specify via the now optional "Final" specification.
2018-11-17 19:42:23 +00:00
bf54ab67e1 Updated OpenFOAM Foundation web-link in headers 2018-07-06 21:42:54 +01:00
f29114bfb6 Removed incomplete, inconsistent, confusing and un-maintained header clutter 2018-06-20 15:55:18 +01:00
2d4bec327c functionObjects::scalarTransport: Corrected typo 2017-02-13 18:25:33 +00:00
0714ccecd6 functionObjects::scalarTransport: Added support for optional laminar and turbulent diffusion coefficients
Description
    Evolves a passive scalar transport equation.

    - To specify the field name set the \c field entry
    - To employ the same numerical schemes as another field set
      the \c schemesField entry,
    - A constant diffusivity may be specified with the \c D entry,

    - Alternatively if a turbulence model is available a turbulent diffusivity
      may be constructed from the laminar and turbulent viscosities using the
      optional diffusivity coefficients \c alphaD and \c alphaDt (which default
      to 1):
      \verbatim
          D = alphaD*nu + alphaDt*nut
      \endverbatim

Resolves feature request https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=2453
2017-02-12 17:19:27 +00:00
a3a7f5f0e6 functionObjects::scalarTransport: Corrected FatalError 2017-02-08 16:57:30 +00:00
c263bbca65 Completed transformation of post-processing utilities into functionObjects 2016-06-28 19:26:23 +01:00
8a5304edf6 Doxygen documentation: Standardized the 'See also' heading 2016-06-17 17:31:34 +01:00
b3f4d5855d functionObjects: Simplified the handling of the post-processing mode
Replaced the 'postProcess' argument to the 'write' and 'execute'
functions with the single static member 'postProcess' in the
functionObject base-class.
2016-06-13 08:36:03 +01:00
4c07e6226d functionObjects: 'output:' -> 'write:' for consistency with the naming of the 'write' function 2016-06-09 16:06:44 +01:00
d744705ee4 functionObjects::scalarTransport: simplified, standardized, rationalized
tutorials/incompressible/pisoFoam/les/pitzDaily: Added scalarTransport
functionObject to demonstrate the new functionality
2016-06-08 15:11:57 +01:00