Commit Graph

21 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
9dd389aaaa fvModels: massSource, zeroDimensionalMassSource: Split into base classes
This makes construction/reading easier and permits derivations of both
types that provide different implementations of the mass flow rate
2023-04-21 08:22:22 +01:00
d7e3306761 fv::massSource: Support mass sinks
If a negative mass flow rate is specified, the mass source fvModel will
now remove mass by adding implicit sources to the transport equations.
Properties are thereby removed at their current value. This is stable,
and is analogous to a zero-gradient outlet boundary condition.
2023-03-28 12:27:52 +01:00
efabb9c935 fvModels: zeroDimensionalMassSource model
This fvModel applies a mass source to the continuity equation and to all
field equations, in a zero-dimensional case. Correction is made to
account for the mass that exits the domain due to expansion in space, so
that the model correctly applies a total mass flow rate. It is
implemented as a light wrapper around the massSource model.
2023-02-28 12:48:47 +00:00
e2c160462e functionObjects::volRegion: Replaced with fvCellSet
Replacing volRegion removes unnecessary functionality duplication and ensures
cell set selection is consistent between functionObjects, fvModels and
fvConstraints for user convenience and reducing the code maintenance overhead.

Description
    General cell set selection class for models that apply to sub-sets
    of the mesh.

    Currently supports cell selection from a set of points, a specified cellSet
    or cellZone or all of the cells.  The selection method can either be
    specified explicitly using the \c select entry or inferred from the
    presence of either a \c cellSet, \c cellZone or \c points entry.  The \c
    select entry is required to select \c all cells.

Usage
    Examples:
    \verbatim
        // Apply everywhere
        select   all;

        // Apply within a given cellSet
        select   cellSet; // Optional
        cellSet         rotor;

        // Apply within a given cellZone
        select   cellZone; // Optional
        cellZone        rotor;

        // Apply in cells containing a list of points
        select   points; // Optional
        points
        (
            (2.25 0.5 0)
            (2.75 0.5 0)
        );
    \endverbatim
2023-02-03 19:16:32 +00:00
295223624b Rationalised and standardised cell, face and point set selection controls
The keyword 'select' is now used to specify the cell, face or point set
selection method consistently across all classes requiring this functionality.

'select' replaces the inconsistently named 'regionType' and 'selectionMode'
keywords used previously but backwards-compatibility is provided for user
convenience.  All configuration files and tutorials have been updated.

Examples of 'select' from the tutorial cases:

functionObjects:

    cellZoneAverage
    {
        type            volFieldValue;
        libs            ("libfieldFunctionObjects.so");

        writeControl    writeTime;
        writeInterval   1;

        fields          (p);
        select          cellZone;
        cellZone        injection;

        operation       volAverage;
        writeFields     false;
    }

    #includeFunc populationBalanceSizeDistribution
    (
        name=numberDensity,
        populationBalance=aggregates,
        select=cellZone,
        cellZone=outlet,
        functionType=numberDensity,
        coordinateType=projectedAreaDiameter,
        allCoordinates=yes,
        normalise=yes,
        logTransform=yes
    )

fvModel:

    cylinderHeat
    {
        type            heatSource;

        select          all;

        q               5e7;
    }

fvConstraint:

    momentumForce
    {
        type            meanVelocityForce;

        select          all;

        Ubar            (0.1335 0 0);
    }
2023-02-01 16:17:16 +00:00
3d2cd9a3b2 fvModels, fvConstraints: Updated constructor argument order for consistency with functionObjects
Following the convention chosen for functionObjects the coefficients dictionary
argument is last in constructor argument list.
2023-01-28 10:28:29 +00:00
160ee637f9 MRF: Further developed to replace SRF
MRF (multiple reference frames) can now be used to simulate SRF (single
reference frame) cases by defining the MRF zone to include all the cells is the
mesh and applying appropriate boundary conditions.  The huge advantage of this
is that MRF can easily be added to any solver by the addition of forcing terms
in the momentum equation and absolute velocity to relative flux conversions in
the formulation of the pressure equation rather than having to reformulate the
momentum and pressure system based on the relative velocity as in traditional
SRF.  Also most of the OpenFOAM solver applications and all the solver modules
already support MRF.

To enable this generalisation of MRF the transformations necessary on the
velocity boundary conditions in the MRF zone can no longer be handled by the
MRFZone class itself but special adapted fvPatchFields are required.  Although
this adds to the case setup it provides much greater flexibility and now complex
inlet/outlet conditions can be applied within the MRF zone, necessary for some
SRF case and which was not possible in the original MRF implementation.  Now for
walls rotating within the MRF zone the new 'MRFnoSlip' velocity boundary
conditions must be applied, e.g. in the
tutorials/modules/incompressibleFluid/mixerVessel2DMRF/constant/MRFProperties
case:

boundaryField
{
    rotor
    {
        type            MRFnoSlip;
    }

    stator
    {
        type            noSlip;
    }

    front
    {
        type            empty;
    }

    back
    {
        type            empty;
    }
}

similarly for SRF cases, e.g. in the
tutorials/modules/incompressibleFluid/mixerSRF case:

boundaryField
{
    inlet
    {
        type            fixedValue;
        value           uniform (0 0 -10);
    }

    outlet
    {
        type            pressureInletOutletVelocity;
        value           $internalField;
    }

    rotor
    {
        type            MRFnoSlip;
    }

    outerWall
    {
        type            noSlip;
    }

    cyclic_half0
    {
        type            cyclic;
    }

    cyclic_half1
    {
        type            cyclic;
    }
}

For SRF case all the cells should be selected in the MRFproperties dictionary
which is achieved by simply setting the optional 'selectionMode' entry to all,
e.g.:

SRF
{
    selectionMode   all;

    origin      (0 0 0);
    axis        (0 0 1);

    rpm         1000;
}

In the above the rotational speed is set in RPM rather than rad/s simply by
setting the 'rpm' entry rather than 'omega'.

The tutorials/modules/incompressibleFluid/rotor2DSRF case is more complex and
demonstrates a transient SRF simulation of a rotor requiring the free-stream
velocity to rotate around the apparently stationary rotor which is achieved
using the new 'MRFFreestreamVelocity' velocity boundary condition.  The
equivalent simulation can be achieved by simply rotating the entire mesh and
keeping the free-stream flow stationary and this is demonstrated in the
tutorials/modules/incompressibleFluid/rotor2DRotating case for comparison.

The special SRFSimpleFoam and SRFPimpleFoam solvers are now redundant and have
been replaced by redirection scripts providing details of the case migration
process.
2022-08-11 18:23:15 +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
1aa194e18b Updated documentation for the distribute(const polyDistributionMap&) function 2022-04-01 09:11:09 +01:00
6047f27aac polyDistributionMap: renamed from polyMeshDistributionMap for consistency with polyTopoChangeMap 2022-03-31 23:44:47 +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
4623ece721 fvModels,fvConstraints: Changed Function1(time) to Function1(user time)
Time-dependent input data is now expected to be specified in user-time rather
than real-time.
2022-01-26 12:45:54 +00:00
5ed8dbb463 fvModels: Added support for mesh redistribution and load-balancing 2021-12-24 15:02:30 +00:00
d002a4de50 massSource: Simplified reading of field value functions 2021-08-27 11:59:44 +01:00
987d5906ef fvModels, fvConstraints: Prevent crash when applied to solver-type function objects
This fixes a crash that occured when the field that the fvModel applies
to does not exist at the point of the fvModel's construction. This is
the case for function objects that solve equations, e.g., the
scalarTransport or age functions, as the relevant fields are constructed
on demand at the point of the functions' execution. Sources and
constraints now work correctly for these sorts of equations.
2021-08-26 11:19:35 +01:00
19bdfa969f fvModels, fvConstraints: Update as a result of mesh motion 2021-08-12 13:26:53 +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
34f6e40753 fvModels: massSource: Specify temperature in example 2021-03-19 09:43:24 +00:00
252b71f3c6 fvModels: Simplified structure using fvCellSet member data
which will allow for a run-time selectable and hence extensible fvCellSet in the
future.
2021-03-09 15:17:32 +00:00
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