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 now serves as an example of how to compute flow-rates
through zones defined by triangulated surfaces.
A small fix has also been added to searchableSurfaceToFaceZone to
improve robustness on ambiguous cases.
It is now possible to define coordinate systems in a central location and
selected them by name for any model requiring one, e.g. the
explicitPorositySource.
Description
Provides a centralized coordinateSystem collection.
For example with the porous region specified in \c constant/fvOptions as
\verbatim
porosity
{
type explicitPorositySource;
explicitPorositySourceCoeffs
{
selectionMode cellZone;
cellZone porousBlockage;
type DarcyForchheimer;
// D 100; // Very little blockage
// D 200; // Some blockage but steady flow
// D 500; // Slight waviness in the far wake
D 1000; // Fully shedding behavior
d ($D $D $D);
f (0 0 0);
coordinateSystem porousBlockage;
}
}
\endverbatim
the corresponding coordinate system \c porousBlockage is looked-up
automatically from the \c constant/coordinateSystems dictionary:
\verbatim
porousBlockage
{
type cartesian;
origin (0 0 0);
coordinateRotation
{
type axesRotation;
e1 (1 0 0);
e2 (0 1 0);
}
}
\endverbatim
See \c tutorials/incompressible/pisoFoam/laminar/porousBlockage
and changed to be an energy implicit correction to a temperature gradient
based heat-flux. This formulation is both energy conservative and temperature
consistent.
The wallHeatFlux functionObject has been updated to use a consistent heat-flux
from the heSolidThermo.
Fourier, eddyDiffusivity and nonUnityLewisEddyDiffusivity thermophysical
transport models now apply an implicit energy correction to a temperature
gradient based heat-flux to provide computational stability and efficiency while
converging to temperature gradient based solution. This ensures consistent heat
exchange between fluid and solid regions in CHT cases and with heat-flux
boundaries.
The Fourier and eddyDiffusivity models support single specie systems only
whereas nonUnityLewisEddyDiffusivity supports specie diffusion with independent
specification of turbulent Prandtl and Schmidt numbers, i.e. non-unity Lewis
number.
The unityLewisFourier and unityLewisEddyDiffusivity thermophysical transport
models use an implicit energy gradient based heat-flux which is optimal for
numerical stability and convergence but does not guarantee consistent heat
exchange between fluid and solid regions and heat-flux boundaries in the
presence of gradients of heat capacity. Both of these models support specie
diffusion with the restriction that the laminar and turbulent Prandtl and
Schmidt numbers are equal, i.e. unity Lewis number.
The thermophysical transport model is specified in the optional
thermophysicalTransport dictionary; if this file is not present the
unityLewisFourier model is selected for laminar and unityLewisEddyDiffusivity
for turbulent cases for backward compatibility.
The chtMultiRegionFoam tutorial cases have been updated to use the most
appropriate of the new thermophysical transport models.
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.
Solid thermo no longer requires a pressure field, so solid regions of
chtMultiRegionFoam cases no longer need a 0/<solidRegionName>/p file.
In order for solidThermo to continue to use heThermo and the low level
thermo classes, it now constructs a uniformGeometricScalarField for the
pressure with the value NaN. This is passed into the low-level thermo
models by heThermo. The enforces the requirement that low-level thermo
models used by solidThermo should have no pressure dependence. If an
instantiation is made with pressure dependence, the code will fail with
a floating point error.
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.
This is useful for testing purposes in comparison with rhoPimpleFoam.
Also made a fix to the handling of multivariate convection schemes in
chtMultiRegionFoam.
The standard set of Lagrangian clouds are now selectable at run-time.
This means that a solver that supports Lagrangian modelling can now use
any type of cloud (with some restrictions). Previously, solvers were
hard-coded to use specific cloud modelling. In addition, a cloud-list
structure has been added so that solvers may select multiple clouds,
rather than just one.
The new system is controlled as follows:
- If only a single cloud is required, then the settings for the
Lagrangian modelling should be placed in a constant/cloudProperties
file.
- If multiple clouds are required, then a constant/clouds file should be
created containing a list of cloud names defined by the user. Each
named cloud then reads settings from a corresponding
constant/<cloudName>Properties file. Clouds are evolved sequentially
in the order in which they are listed in the constant/clouds file.
- If no clouds are required, then the constant/cloudProperties file and
constant/clouds file should be omitted.
The constant/cloudProperties or constant/<cloudName>Properties files are
the same as previous cloud properties files; e.g.,
constant/kinematicCloudProperties or constant/reactingCloud1Properties,
except that they now also require an additional top-level "type" entry
to select which type of cloud is to be used. The available options for
this entry are:
type cloud; // A basic cloud of solid
// particles. Includes forces,
// patch interaction, injection,
// dispersion and stochastic
// collisions. Same as the cloud
// previously used by
// rhoParticleFoam
// (uncoupledKinematicParticleFoam)
type collidingCloud; // As "cloud" but with resolved
// collision modelling. Same as the
// cloud previously used by DPMFoam
// and particleFoam
// (icoUncoupledKinematicParticleFoam)
type MPPICCloud; // As "cloud" but with MPPIC
// collision modelling. Same as the
// cloud previously used by
// MPPICFoam.
type thermoCloud; // As "cloud" but with
// thermodynamic modelling and heat
// transfer with the carrier phase.
// Same as the limestone cloud
// previously used by
// coalChemistryFoam.
type reactingCloud; // As "thermoCloud" but with phase
// change and mass transfer
// coupling with the carrier
// phase. Same as the cloud
// previously used in fireFoam.
type reactingMultiphaseCloud; // As "reactingCloud" but with
// particles that contain multiple
// phases. Same as the clouds
// previously used in
// reactingParcelFoam and
// simpleReactingParcelFoam and the
// coal cloud used in
// coalChemistryFoam.
type sprayCloud; // As "reactingCloud" but with
// additional spray-specific
// collision and breakup modelling.
// Same as the cloud previously
// used in sprayFoam and
// engineFoam.
The first three clouds are not thermally coupled, so are available in
all Lagrangian solvers. The last four are thermally coupled and require
access to the carrier thermodynamic model, so are only available in
compressible Lagrangian solvers.
This change has reduced the number of solvers necessary to provide the
same functionality; solvers that previously differed only in their
Lagrangian modelling can now be combined. The Lagrangian solvers have
therefore been consolidated with consistent naming as follows.
denseParticleFoam: Replaces DPMFoam and MPPICFoam
reactingParticleFoam: Replaces sprayFoam and coalChemistryFoam
simpleReactingParticleFoam: Replaces simpleReactingParcelFoam
buoyantReactingParticleFoam: Replaces reactingParcelFoam
fireFoam and engineFoam remain, although fireFoam is likely to be merged
into buoyantReactingParticleFoam in the future once the additional
functionality it provides is generalised.
Some additional minor functionality has also been added to certain
solvers:
- denseParticleFoam has a "cloudForceSplit" control which can be set in
system/fvOptions.PIMPLE. This provides three methods for handling the
cloud momentum coupling, each of which have different trade-off-s
regarding numerical artefacts in the velocity field. See
denseParticleFoam.C for more information, and also bug report #3385.
- reactingParticleFoam and buoyantReactingParticleFoam now support
moving mesh in order to permit sharing parts of their implementation
with engineFoam.
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.