Commit Graph

26 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
e5cf0cf4ed Cloud: Accumulate warning messages associated with location failures
Warnings about initialisation of particles with locations outside of the
mesh and about the positional inaccuracy of NCC transfers are now
accumulated and printed once per time-step. This way, the log isn't
obscured by hundreds of such warnings.

Also, the pattern in which warnings are silenced after some arbitrary
number (typically 100) have been issued has been removed. This pattern
means that user viewing the log later in the run may be unaware that a
problem is still present. Accumulated warnings are concise enough that
they do not need to be silenced. They are generated every time-step, and
so remain visible throughout the log.
2023-09-19 10:57:11 +01:00
2b3b820c90 Corrected duplicate word and it's typos 2023-07-11 11:02:47 +01:00
04dd989911 Time: Removed graphFormat
setFormat no longer defaults to the value of graphFormat optionally set in
controlDict and must be set in the functionObject dictionary.

boundaryFoam, financialFoam and pdfPlot still require a graphFormat entry in
controlDict but this is now read directly rather than by Time.
2023-06-16 14:51:30 +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Foam::graph superseded by the more general Foam::setWriter reducing code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
c8f177e453 streamlines: Protected operation agaist no streamlines being generated 2023-02-16 11:12:36 +00:00
06e29c44ab Lagrangian: Removed sub-cycling and improved injection behaviour
Support for mesh sub-cycling has been removed from Lagrangian. Various
Lagrangian processes already support sub-dividing the time-step. It is
easier and more efficient to extend that support all the way to the
high-level cloud objects, rather than to sub-cycle the mesh.

This has additional benefits. The cloud now no longer needs to reset the
step fraction at the start of every sub-motion. Injection can take
advantage of this by modifying particles' step fractions in order to
distribute them uniformly through the time-step. This is a simple and
efficient method. Previously, injection would track the particles some
distance after injection. This was more expensive to do, it resulted in
spatial artefacts in the injected Lagrangian field, and it did not
correctly handle interactions with patches or parallel transfers.

The lack of injection tracking also means that particles injected
through patches now start their simulation topologically connected to
the face on which they are created. This means that they correctly
trigger cloud functions associated with that face and/or patch.

The injection models now also return barycentric coordinates directly,
rather than the global position of injected particles. For methods that
initially generate locations naturally in terms of barycentric
coordinates, this prevents unnecessary and potentially fragile
conversion from barycentric to Cartesian and back again. These are
typically the methods that "fill" some sort of space; e.g., patch or
cell-zone injections.
2022-12-13 14:32:24 +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
5b11f5a833 functionObjects: Standardised file paths for functions applied to regions
Function objects now write to the following path when applied to a
non-default region of a multi-region case:

    postProcessing/<regionName>/<functionName>/<time>/

Previously the order of <regionName> and <functionName> was not
consistent between the various function objects.

Resolves bug report https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=3907
2022-10-13 11:28:26 +01:00
f4ac5f8748 AMIInterpolation, cyclicAMI: Removed
AMIInterpolation and cyclicAMI have been superseded by patchToPatch and
nonConformalCoupled, respectively.

The motivation behind this change is explained in the following article:

    https://cfd.direct/openfoam/free-software/non-conformal-coupling/

Information about how to convert a case which uses cyclicAMI to
nonConformalCoupled can be found here:

    https://cfd.direct/openfoam/free-software/using-non-conformal-coupling/
2022-09-22 10:05:41 +01:00
4c223b8aee particle: Removed polyMesh reference
This reference represents unnecessary storage. The mesh can be obtained
from tracking data or passed to the particle evolution functions by
argument.

In addition, removing the mesh reference makes it possible to construct
as particle from an Istream without the need for an iNew class. This
simplifies stream-based transfer, and makes it possible for particles to
be communicated by a polyDistributionMap.
2022-09-21 16:31:40 +01:00
b0d2002e72 functionObjects: Clean up and completion of hooks 2022-08-05 14:20:53 +01:00
b88be2d950 functionObjects::surfaceFieldValue: Update on mesh change
check that the mesh corresponds to the functionObject region
2022-07-10 19:40:14 +01:00
ed7073516f streamlines: Corrected calculation of age 2022-06-07 09:11:55 +01:00
b4b8b212bf cyclicACMI, cyclicRepeatAMI: Removed
The functionality provided by 'cyclicACMI' and 'cyclicRepeatAMI' has
been entirely superseded by non-conformal coupled (NCC). All references
to 'cyclicACMI' and 'cyclicRepeatAMI' have therefore been removed.

See previous commits 569fa31d and 420866cf for more explanation,
instructions on updating, and relevant tutorial cases.
2022-05-18 10:26:34 +01:00
569fa31d09 Non-Conformal Coupled (NCC): Conservative coupling of non-conforming patches
This major development provides coupling of patches which are
non-conformal, i.e. where the faces of one patch do not match the faces
of the other. The coupling is fully conservative and second order
accurate in space, unlike the Arbitrary Mesh Interface (AMI) and
associated ACMI and Repeat AMI methods which NCC replaces.

Description:

A non-conformal couple is a connection between a pair of boundary
patches formed by projecting one patch onto the other in a way that
fills the space between them. The intersection between the projected
surface and patch forms new faces that are incorporated into the finite
volume mesh. These new faces are created identically on both sides of
the couple, and therefore become equivalent to internal faces within the
mesh. The affected cells remain closed, meaning that the area vectors
sum to zero for all the faces of each cell. Consequently, the main
benefits of the finite volume method, i.e. conservation and accuracy,
are not undermined by the coupling.

A couple connects parts of mesh that are otherwise disconnected and can
be used in the following ways:

+ to simulate rotating geometries, e.g. a propeller or stirrer, in which
  a part of the mesh rotates with the geometry and connects to a
  surrounding mesh which is not moving;
+ to connect meshes that are generated separately, which do not conform
  at their boundaries;
+ to connect patches which only partially overlap, in which the
  non-overlapped section forms another boundary, e.g. a wall;
+ to simulate a case with a geometry which is periodically repeating by
  creating multiple couples with different transformations between
  patches.

The capability for simulating partial overlaps replaces the ACMI
functionality, currently provided by the 'cyclicACMI' patch type, and
which is unreliable unless the couple is perfectly flat. The capability
for simulating periodically repeating geometry replaces the Repeat AMI
functionality currently provided by the 'cyclicRepeatAMI' patch type.

Usage:

The process of meshing for NCC is very similar to existing processes for
meshing for AMI. Typically, a mesh is generated with an identifiable set
of internal faces which coincide with the surface through which the mesh
will be coupled. These faces are then duplicated by running the
'createBaffles' utility to create two boundary patches. The points are
then split using 'splitBaffles' in order to permit independent motion of
the patches.

In AMI, these patches are assigned the 'cyclicAMI' patch type, which
couples them using AMI interpolation methods.

With NCC, the patches remain non-coupled, e.g. a 'wall' type. Coupling
is instead achieved by running the new 'createNonConformalCouples'
utility, which creates additional coupled patches of type
'nonConformalCyclic'. These appear in the 'constant/polyMesh/boundary'
file with zero faces; they are populated with faces in the finite volume
mesh during the connection process in NCC.

For a single couple, such as that which separates the rotating and
stationary sections of a mesh, the utility can be called using the
non-coupled patch names as arguments, e.g.

    createNonConformalCouples -overwrite rotatingZoneInner rotatingZoneOuter

where 'rotatingZoneInner' and 'rotatingZoneOuter' are the names of the
patches.

For multiple couples, and/or couples with transformations,
'createNonConformalCouples' should be run without arguments. Settings
will then be read from a configuration file named
'system/createNonConformalCouplesDict'. See
'$FOAM_ETC/caseDicts/annotated/createNonConformalCouplesDict' for
examples.

Boundary conditions must be specified for the non-coupled patches. For a
couple where the patches fully overlap, boundary conditions
corresponding to a slip wall are typically applied to fields, i.e
'movingWallSlipVelocity' (or 'slip' if the mesh is stationary) for
velocity U, 'zeroGradient' or 'fixedFluxPressure' for pressure p, and
'zeroGradient' for other fields.  For a couple with
partially-overlapping patches, boundary conditions are applied which
physically represent the non-overlapped region, e.g. a no-slip wall.

Boundary conditions also need to be specified for the
'nonConformalCyclic' patches created by 'createNonConformalCouples'. It
is generally recommended that this is done by including the
'$FOAM_ETC/caseDicts/setConstraintTypes' file in the 'boundaryField'
section of each of the field files, e.g.

    boundaryField
    {
        #includeEtc "caseDicts/setConstraintTypes"

        inlet
        {
             ...
        }

        ...
    }

For moving mesh cases, it may be necessary to correct the mesh fluxes
that are changed as a result of the connection procedure. If the
connected patches do not conform perfectly to the mesh motion, then
failure to correct the fluxes can result in noise in the pressure
solution.

Correction for the mesh fluxes is enabled by the 'correctMeshPhi' switch
in the 'PIMPLE' (or equivalent) section of 'system/fvSolution'. When it
is enabled, solver settings are required for 'MeshPhi'. The solution
just needs to distribute the error enough to dissipate the noise. A
smooth solver with a loose tolerance is typically sufficient, e.g. the
settings in 'system/fvSolution' shown below:

    solvers
    {
        MeshPhi
        {
            solver          smoothSolver;
            smoother        symGaussSeidel;
            tolerance       1e-2;
            relTol          0;
        }
        ...
    }

    PIMPLE
    {
         correctMeshPhi      yes;
         ...
    }

The solution of 'MeshPhi' is an inexpensive computation since it is
applied only to a small subset of the mesh adjacent to the
couple. Conservation is maintained whether or not the mesh flux
correction is enabled, and regardless of the solution tolerance for
'MeshPhi'.

Advantages of NCC:

+ NCC maintains conservation which is required for many numerical
  schemes and algorithms to operate effectively, in particular those
  designed to maintain boundedness of a solution.

+ Closed-volume systems no longer suffer from accumulation or loss of
  mass, poor convergence of the pressure equation, and/or concentration
  of error in the reference cell.

+ Partially overlapped simulations are now possible on surfaces that are
  not perfectly flat. The projection fills space so no overlaps or
  spaces are generated inside contiguously overlapping sections, even if
  those sections have sharp angles.

+ The finite volume faces created by NCC have geometrically accurate
  centres. This makes the method second order accurate in space.

+ The polyhedral mesh no longer requires duplicate boundary faces to be
  generated in order to run a partially overlapped simulation.

+ Lagrangian elements can now transfer across non-conformal couplings in
  parallel.

+ Once the intersection has been computed and applied to the finite
  volume mesh, it can use standard cyclic or processor cyclic finite
  volume boundary conditions, with no need for additional patch types or
  matrix interfaces.

+ Parallel communication is done using the standard
  processor-patch-field system. This is more efficient than alternative
  systems since it has been carefully optimised for use within the
  linear solvers.

+ Coupled patches are disconnected prior to mesh motion and topology
  change and reconnected afterwards. This simplifies the boundary
  condition specification for mesh motion fields.

Resolved Bug Reports:

+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=663
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=883
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=887
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=1337
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=1388
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=1422
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=1829
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=1841
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=2274
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=2561
+ https://bugs.openfoam.org/view.php?id=3817

Deprecation:

NCC replaces the functionality provided by AMI, ACMI and Repeat AMI.
ACMI and Repeat AMI are insufficiently reliable to warrant further
maintenance so are removed in an accompanying commit to OpenFOAM-dev.
AMI is more widely used so will be retained alongside NCC for the next
version release of OpenFOAM and then subsequently removed from
OpenFOAM-dev.
2022-05-18 10:25:43 +01:00
48d9c77085 Updated documentation for foamInfo: The "Note" entry is now part of "Description" or "Usage"
so that it is printed by foamInfo.
2022-05-11 21:27:27 +01:00
47b0cd54dd fvMeshTopoChangers::meshToMesh: New fvMesh topoChanger which maps to a sequence of meshes at run-time
With fvMeshTopoChangers::meshToMesh it is now possible to map the solution to a
specified sequence of pre-generated meshes at run-time to support arbitrary mesh
changes, refinements, un-refinements, changes in region topology, geometry,
etc.  Additionally mesh-motion between the sequence of meshes is supported to
allow for e.g. piston and valve motion in engines.

The tutorials/incompressible/pimpleFoam/laminar/movingCone case has been updated
to provide a demonstration of the advantages of this run-time mesh-mapping by
mapping to meshes that are finer behind the cone and coarser in front of the
cone as the cone approaches the end of the domain, thus maintaining good
resolution while avoiding excessive cell aspect ratio as the mesh is squeezed.
The dynamicMeshDict for the movingCone case is;

mover
{
    type            motionSolver;

    libs            ("libfvMeshMovers.so" "libfvMotionSolvers.so");

    motionSolver    velocityComponentLaplacian;

    component       x;
    diffusivity     directional (1 200 0);
}

topoChanger
{
    type    meshToMesh;

    libs    ("libmeshToMeshTopoChanger.so");

    times   (0.0015 0.003);

    timeDelta 1e-6;
}

which lists the mesh mapping times 0.0015s 0.003s and meshes for these times in
directories constant/meshToMesh_0.0015 and constant/meshToMesh_0.003 are
generated in the Allrun script before the pimpleFoam run:

runApplication -a blockMesh -dict blockMeshDict.2
rm -rf constant/meshToMesh_0.0015
mkdir constant/meshToMesh_0.0015
mv constant/polyMesh constant/meshToMesh_0.0015

runApplication -a blockMesh -dict blockMeshDict.3
rm -rf constant/meshToMesh_0.003
mkdir constant/meshToMesh_0.003
mv constant/polyMesh constant/meshToMesh_0.003

runApplication -a blockMesh -dict blockMeshDict.1

runApplication $application

Note: This functionality is experimental and has only undergone basic testing.
It is likely that it does not yet work with all functionObject, fvModels
etc. which will need updating to support this form of mesh topology change.
2022-04-06 16:37:22 +01:00
7592a81c6e polyMeshMap: New mesh to mesh map for the new mapping update function mapMesh(const polyMeshMap&)
This new mapping structure is designed to support run-time mesh-to-mesh mapping
to allow arbitrary changes to the mesh structure, for example during extreme
motion requiring significant topology change including region disconnection etc.
2022-04-04 11:15:41 +01:00
3ace8f434b polyTopoChangeMap: Renamed from mapPolyMesh to clarify purpose and scope
The polyTopoChangeMap is the map specifically relating to polyMesh topological
changes generated by polyTopoChange and used to update and map mesh related
types and fields following the topo-change.
2022-03-31 22:05:37 +01:00
2e6eb5f2ce polyMeshDistributionMap: renamed mapDistributePolyMesh -> polyMeshDistributionMap
This is a map data structure rather than a class or function which performs the
mapping operation so polyMeshDistributionMap is more logical and comprehensible
than mapDistributePolyMesh.
2022-03-31 18:01:44 +01:00
25a6d068f0 sampledSets, streamlines: Various improvements
Sampled sets and streamlines now write all their fields to the same
file. This prevents excessive duplication of the geometry and makes
post-processing tasks more convenient.

"axis" entries are now optional in sampled sets and streamlines. When
omitted, a default entry will be used, which is chosen appropriately for
the coordinate set and the write format. Some combinations are not
supported. For example, a scalar ("x", "y", "z" or "distance") axis
cannot be used to write in the vtk format, as vtk requires 3D locations
with which to associate data. Similarly, a point ("xyz") axis cannot be
used with the gnuplot format, as gnuplot needs a single scalar to
associate with the x-axis.

Streamlines can now write out fields of any type, not just scalars and
vectors, and there is no longer a strict requirement for velocity to be
one of the fields.

Streamlines now output to postProcessing/<functionName>/time/<file> in
the same way as other functions. The additional "sets" subdirectory has
been removed.

The raw set writer now aligns columns correctly.

The handling of segments in coordSet and sampledSet has been
fixed/completed. Segments mean that a coordinate set can represent a
number of contiguous lines, disconnected points, or some combination
thereof. This works in parallel; segments remain contiguous across
processor boundaries. Set writers now only need one write method, as the
previous "writeTracks" functionality is now handled by streamlines
providing the writer with the appropriate segment structure.

Coordinate sets and set writers now have a convenient programmatic
interface. To write a graph of A and B against some coordinate X, in
gnuplot format, we can call the following:

    setWriter::New("gnuplot")->write
    (
        directoryName,
        graphName,
        coordSet(true, "X", X), // <-- "true" indicates a contiguous
        "A",                    //     line, "false" would mean
        A,                      //     disconnected points
        "B",
        B
    );

This write function is variadic. It supports any number of
field-name-field pairs, and they can be of any primitive type.

Support for Jplot and Xmgrace formats has been removed. Raw, CSV,
Gnuplot, VTK and Ensight formats are all still available.

The old "graph" functionality has been removed from the code, with the
exception of the randomProcesses library and associated applications
(noise, DNSFoam and boxTurb). The intention is that these should also
eventually be converted to use the setWriters. For now, so that it is
clear that the "graph" functionality is not to be used elsewhere, it has
been moved into a subdirectory of the randomProcesses library.
2021-12-07 11:18:27 +00:00
506d2891b7 transformerIOList: Centralised instantiation 2021-11-25 09:45:04 +00:00
75cf502d34 streamlinesParticle: Instantiate transformer IO list 2021-11-24 12:37:10 +00:00
701fc2b6a5 streamlines: Corrected handling of cyclic boundaries
By default a streamline now stops at the cyclic and starts again at the
coupled location on the opposite cyclic.

There is also now an "outside" option that can be passed to the
streamlines function. This changes the default behaviour so that the
streamline continues outside of the mesh when it encounters a cyclic
patch. The following postProcess command uses the "outside" option in
this way:

    postProcess -latestTime -func "
        streamlinesPatch
        (
            patch=inlet,
            nPoints=50,
            outside=true,
            fields=(p U)
        )"
2021-11-24 12:26:12 +00:00
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
e9733e50ba functionObjects: Renamed streamLine and streamLines to streamlines 2021-07-14 10:35:02 +01:00