It is better to not select and instantiate a model, fvOption etc. than to create
it and set it inactive as the creation process requires reading of settings,
parameters, fields etc. with all the associated specification and storage
without being used. Also the incomplete implementation added a lot of
complexity in the low-level operation of models introducing a significant
maintenance overhead and development overhead for new models.
TableBase, TableFile and Table now combined into a single simpler Table class
which handle both the reading of embedded and file data using the generalised
TableReader. The new EmbeddedTableReader handles the embedded data reading
providing the functionality of the original Table class within the same
structure that can read the data from separate files.
The input format defaults to 'embedded' unless the 'file' entry is present and
the Table class is added to the run-time selection table under the name 'table'
and 'tableFile' which provides complete backward comparability. However it is
advisable to migrate cases to use the new 'table' entry and all tutorial cases
have been updated.
using Function1 and supporting all the standard Function1s including tabulated
and coded.
tutorials/multiphase/interFoam/laminar/sloshingTank3D6DoF updated to use
sixDoFMotion.
and renamed defaultSpecie as its mass fraction is derived from the sum of the
mass fractions of all other species and it need not be inert but must be present
everywhere, e.g. N2 in air/fuel combustion which can be involved in the
production of NOx.
The previous name inertSpecie in thermophysicalProperties is supported for
backward compatibility.
This tutorial demonstrates the use of the population balance modeling
capability of multiphaseEulerFoam for the case of a vertical pipe. It
superseeds all bubbleColumnPolydisperse cases, which have been removed.
Patch contributed by Institute of Fluid Dynamics,
Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf (HZDR)
Expanded the documentation and updated the mean free path calculation
Patch contributed by Institute of Fluid Dynamics,
Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf (HZDR)
Optional switches "splitPhaseFlux" and "meanFluxReference" are now provided and
can be set true in fvSolution e.g.
solvers
{
"alpha.*"
{
nAlphaCorr 1;
nAlphaSubCycles 2;
splitPhaseFlux true;
meanFluxReference true;
}
.
.
.
to reinstate the previous form of phase flux limiters in which the mean and
phase flux differences are interpolated separately and the limited correction
referenced to the mean rather than phase flux. This form of discretisation and
limiting is more aggressive than the latest version and hence less accurate but
it is hoped that the latest form of limitSum will handle the boundedness at the
upper limit reliably allowing the new more accurate limiters to be used for most
if not all multiphase simulations.
Most fvOptions change the state of the fields and equations they are applied to
but do not change internal state so it makes more sense that the interface is
const, consistent with MeshObjects. For the few fvOptions which do maintain a
changing state the member data is now mutable.
foamDictionary executions are now wrapped by runApplication like any
other execution so that they do not print during a test loop.
foamDictionary does not produce a conforming log, however, so
log.foamDictionary has been filtered out of the formation of the test
loop report so that false failures are not reported.
The new optional 'slash' scoping syntax is now the default and provides a more
intuitive and flexible syntax than the previous 'dot' syntax, corresponding to
the common directory/file access syntax used in UNIX, providing support for
reading entries from other dictionary files.
In the 'slash' syntax
'/' is the scope operator
'../' is the parent dictionary scope operator
'!' is the top-level dictionary scope operator
Examples:
internalField 3.4;
active
{
type fixedValue;
value.air $internalField;
}
inactive
{
type anotherFixedValue;
value $../active/value.air;
anotherValue $!active/value.air;
sub
{
value $../../active/value.air;
anotherValue $!active/value.air;
}
}
"U.*"
{
solver GAMG;
}
e.air
{
$U.air;
}
external
{
value $testSlashDict2!active/value.air;
}
active2
{
$testSlashDict2!active;
}
If there is a part of the keyword before the '!' then this is taken to be the
file name of the dictionary from which the entry will be looked-up using the
part of the keyword after the '!'. For example given a file testSlashDict containing
internalField 5.6;
active
{
type fixedValue;
value.air $internalField;
}
entries from it can be read directly from another file, e.g.
external
{
value $testSlashDict2!active/value.air;
}
active2
{
$testSlashDict2!active;
}
which expands to
external
{
value 5.6;
}
active2
{
type fixedValue;
value.air 5.6;
}
These examples are provided in applications/test/dictionary.
The the default syntax can be changed from 'slash' to 'dot' in etc/controlDict
to revert to the previous behaviour:
OptimisationSwitches
{
.
.
.
// Default dictionary scoping syntax
inputSyntax slash; // Change to dot for previous behaviour
}
or within a specific dictionary by adding the entry
See applications/test/dictionary/testDotDict.
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.
The new multiphaseEulerFoam is based on reactingMultiphaseEulerFoam with some
improvements and rationalisation to assist maintenance and further development.
The phase system solution has been enhanced to handle two phases more
effectively and all two-phase specific models updated for compatibility so that
multiphaseEulerFoam can also replace reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam.
When running multiphaseEulerFoam with only two-phases the default behaviour is
to solve for both phase-fractions but optionally a reference phase can be
specified so that only the other phase-fraction is solved, providing better
compatibility with the behaviour of reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam.
All reactingMultiphaseEulerFoam and reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam tutorials have
been updated for multiphaseEulerFoam.
The base phaseSystem now provides all the functionality needed for
reactingMultiphaseEulerFoam and twoPhaseSystem is a specialisation, simplifying
maintenance.
Description
This functionObject writes the phase-fraction map field alpha.map with
incremental value ranges for each phase
e.g., with values 0-1 for water, 1-2 for air, 2-3 for oil etc.
Example of function object specification:
\verbatim
phaseMap
{
type phaseMap;
libs ("libreactingEulerFoamFunctionObjects.so");
writeControl writeTime;
}
\endverbatim
Usage
\table
Property | Description | Required | Default value
type | type name: phaseMap | yes |
\endtable
This replaces the alphas functionality previously built-in to
reactingMultiphaseEulerFoam so that the storage, calculation and writing of the
phase map field is now under user control.
The optional reference phase fraction field is not read even if the file is
present, it is constructed with "calculated" BCs as it is a derived field. All
other phase fraction field files are read and now must be present.
for compatibility with reactingMultiphaseEulerFoam when run with two-phases.
Some of these two-phase models could be enhanced to operate with multiple
dispersed phases in the future.
In order to update these models for reactingMultiphaseEulerFoam it has been
necessary to break compatibility with the now redundant twoPhaseEulerFoam solver
which has been superseded by the much more capable reactingEulerFoam solvers and
now removed.
A new family of interface compression interpolation schemes based on
piecewise-linear interface calculation (PLIC). PLIC represents an interface by
surface-cuts which split each cell to match the volume fraction of the phase in
that cell. The surface-cuts are oriented according to the point field of the
local phase fraction. The phase fraction on each cell face — the interpolated
value — is then calculated from the amount submerged below the surface-cut.
The basic PLIC method generates a single cut so cannot handle cells in which
there are multiple interfaces or where the interface is not fully resolved. In
those cells, the interpolation reverts to an alternative scheme, typically
standard interface compression. PLIC, with a fallback to interface compression,
produces robust solutions for real engineering cases. It can run with large time
steps so can solve problems like hydrodynamics of a planing hull, with rigid
body motion of the hull (above). The user selects PLIC by the following setting
in fvSchemes:
div(phi,alpha) Gauss PLIC interfaceCompression vanLeer 1;
The multicut PLIC (MPLIC) scheme extends PLIC to handle multiple
surface-cuts. Where a single cut is insufficient, MPLIC performs a topological
face-edge-face walk to produce multiple splits of a cell. If that is still
insufficient, MPLIC decomposes the cell into tetrahedrons on which the cuts are
applied. The extra cutting carries an additional computational cost but requires
no fallback. The user selects MPLIC by the following setting in the fvSchemes
file:
div(phi,alpha) Gauss MPLIC;
Variants of the PLIC and MPLIC schemes are also available which use velocities
at the face points to calculate the face flux. These PLICU and MPLICU schemes
are likely to be more accurate in regions of interface under high shear.
More details can be found here:
https://cfd.direct/openfoam/free-software/multiphase-interface-capturing
Jakub Knir
CFD Direct Ltd.
A new run-time selectable interface compression scheme framework has been added
to the two-phase VoF solvers to provide greater flexibility, extensibility and
more consistent user-interface. The previously built-in interface compression
is now in the standard run-time selectable surfaceInterpolationScheme
interfaceCompression:
Class
Foam::interfaceCompression
Description
Interface compression corrected scheme, based on counter-gradient
transport, to maintain sharp interfaces during VoF simulations.
The interface compression is applied to the face interpolated field from a
suitable 2nd-order shape-preserving NVD or TVD scheme, e.g. vanLeer or
vanAlbada. A coefficient is supplied to control the degree of compression,
with a value of 1 suitable for most VoF cases to ensure interface integrity.
A value larger than 1 can be used but the additional compression can bias
the interface to follow the mesh more closely while a value smaller than 1
can lead to interface smearing.
Example:
\verbatim
divSchemes
{
.
.
div(phi,alpha) Gauss interfaceCompression vanLeer 1;
.
.
}
\endverbatim
The separate scheme for the interface compression term "div(phirb,alpha)" is no
longer required or used nor is the compression coefficient cAlpha in fvSolution
as this is now part of the "div(phi,alpha)" scheme specification as shown above.
Backward-compatibility is provided by checking the specified "div(phi,alpha)"
scheme against the known interface compression schemes and if it is not one of
those the new interfaceCompression scheme is used with the cAlpha value
specified in fvSolution.
More details can be found here:
https://cfd.direct/openfoam/free-software/multiphase-interface-capturing
Henry G. Weller
CFD Direct Ltd.
All models that require templating on the thermodynamic model, including
the thermodynamic models themselves, are now instantiated using a
centralised set of variadic macros. Seven macros exist to instantiate
models for different classes of thermodynamics model. These are:
forGases: All model combinations valid for gases
forCommonGases: The most commonly used gas models
forAbsoluteGases: A limited selection of gas models with absolute
forms of energy, for use with Xi-combustion models
forLiquids: All model combinations valid for liquids
forCommonLiquids: The most commonly used liquid models
forPolynomials: Model combinations with properties fitted to
polynomials
forSolids: All model combinations valid for solids
All the *ThermoPhysics typedefs have been removed, as this system was
fundamentally not extensible. The enormous lists of thermodynamic
instantiations that existed for reaction thermos, chemistry models,
tabulation methods, etc..., were extremely difficult to read and reason
about what combinations are valid under what circumstances. This change
centralises those decisions, makes them concise and readable, and makes
them consistent across the entire codebase.
Soot model selection has now been brought up to date in line with
chemistry, combustion, and others. The angle-bracketed part of the name
is no longer necessary; this information is determined directly from the
existing thermo model. So, now to select a mixture-fraction soot model,
the entry is simply:
sootModel mixtureFraction;
Rather than:
sootModel mixtureFraction<rhoReactionThermo,gasHThermoPhysics>;
The only place in which *ThermoPhysics typedefs are still required in
the selection name is in the thermalBaffle1D boundary condition. Here
there is no thermo model from which to determine a name. This eventually
needs resolving either by adding a selection mechanism similar to that
of the thermo packages themselves, or by removing this boundary
condition in favour of the (non-1D) thermal baffle boundary condition
and region model.
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.
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