Commit Graph

21 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
704b65f8de triangle, tetrahedron: Consolidate circumCircle/Sphere functions 2022-10-27 08:52:14 +01:00
261ce05fac sampledSurfaces: Write multiple fields to the same file
This prevents excessive duplication of surface geometry and makes
post-processing tasks in paraview more convenient.

The Nastran and Star-CD surface formats were found not to work, so
support for these output types has been removed. Raw, VTK, Foam and
Ensight formats are all still available.
2021-11-23 14:44:34 +00:00
cc92330253 IOobject, regIOobject: rationalised handling of paths for global and local objects
now all path functions in 'IOobject' are either templated on the type or require a
'globalFile' argument to specify if the type is case global e.g. 'IOdictionary' or
decomposed in parallel, e.g. almost everything else.

The 'global()' and 'globalFile()' virtual functions are now in 'regIOobject'
abstract base-class and overridden as required by derived classes.  The path
functions using 'global()' and 'globalFile()' to differentiate between global
and processor local objects are now also in 'regIOobject' rather than 'IOobject'
to ensure the path returned is absolutely consistent with the type.

Unfortunately there is still potential for unexpected IO behaviour inconsistent
with the global/local nature of the type due to the 'fileOperation' classes
searching the processor directory for case global objects before searching the
case directory.  This approach appears to be a work-around for incomplete
integration with and rationalisation of 'IOobject' but with the changes above it
is no longer necessary.  Unfortunately this "up" searching is baked-in at a low
level and mixed-up with various complex ways to pick the processor directory
name out of the object path and will take some unravelling but this work will
undertaken as time allows.
2021-08-09 21:23:12 +01:00
dae463dbd8 TimePaths: Rationalised path methods 2021-06-24 14:20:00 +01:00
a0ca9a745e applications/utilities/surface: Updated handling of -dict option 2021-03-05 14:43:35 +00:00
0e13649996 surfaceFeatures: Consistent plane specification for subsetting
Specifying a plane with which to subset feature edges is now done using
the same dictionary syntax used elsewhere in OpenFOAM. For example, in
system/surfaceFeaturesDict:

    subsetFeatures
    {
        // Include only edges that intersect the plane
        plane
        {
            planeType       pointAndNormal;
            point           (0 0 0);
            normal          (1 0 0);
        }

        ...
    }
2021-02-18 09:09:53 +00:00
66c62e9296 searchableSurface: Renamed geometry directory triSurface -> geometry
Originally the only supported geometry specification were triangulated surfaces,
hence the name of the directory: constant/triSurface, however now that other
surface specifications are supported and provided it is much more logical that
the directory is named accordingly: constant/geometry.  All tutorial and
template cases have been updated.

Note that backward compatibility is provided such that if the constant/geometry
directory does not exist but constant/triSurface does then the geometry files
are read from there.
2021-02-04 13:51:48 +00:00
fbe98c6e84 surfaceFeatures: Added optional input of maximum angle between opposite points considered close
To handle the additional optional specification for the closeness calculation
these settings are now is a sub-dictionary of surfaceFeaturesDict, e.g.

    closeness
    {
        // Output the closeness of surface elements to other surface elements.
        faceCloseness           no;

        // Output the closeness of surface points to other surface elements.
        pointCloseness          yes;

        // Optional maximum angle between opposite points considered close
        internalAngleTolerance  80;
        externalAngleTolerance  80;
    }
2020-03-16 19:29:28 +00:00
66397001c2 regionModels::kinematicSingleLayer: Rationalised and simplified the handling of the film surface and wall velocities 2020-03-06 15:49:59 +00:00
84759ee0b8 sampledSurface: Added support for writing surfaces in binary format
by specifying

    writeFormat binary;

in the sampledSurface dictionary.
2020-01-29 12:42:05 +00:00
3631f13a98 sampledSurface/writers: Removed unnecessary "verbose" argument 2020-01-28 22:46:00 +00:00
c8a1c95b06 IOobject: Added localPath and localObjectPath member functions
For many information and diagnostic messages the absolute path of the object is
not required and the local path relative to the current case is sufficient; the
new localObjectPath() member function of IOobject provides a convenient way of
printing this.
2020-01-24 11:52:45 +00:00
d38a680dae surfaceFeatures: Separated "closness" option into "faceCloseness" and "pointCloseness"
For complex geometries the calculation of surface face and point "closeness" can
be quite time consuming and usually only one or other is required; the new
options allow the user to specify which should be calculated and written.
2020-01-18 23:04:49 +00:00
5eaf74c3a4 dictionary scalar lookup: simplified syntax using the type templated lookup function
Replaced
    readScalar(dict.lookup("name"))
with
    dict.lookup<scalar>("name")
2019-11-27 14:56:32 +00:00
bf54ab67e1 Updated OpenFOAM Foundation web-link in headers 2018-07-06 21:42:54 +01:00
786318cabd utilities: Centralized annotated utility dictionaries to etc/caseDicts/annotated 2018-06-11 17:20:08 +01:00
7a0155f5a9 Added Description to surfaceFeatures and surfaceFeatureExtract 2018-05-31 09:03:52 +01:00
aea8dc0516 tutorials: Updated to use surfaceFeatures rather than the deprecated surfaceFeatureExtract 2018-05-29 19:18:53 +01:00
87e32ab499 Code style: Updated line comments to start with a space
//This is a comment   ->   // This is a comment
2018-05-01 11:57:50 +01:00
aaed6290d0 surfaceFeatures: New version of surfaceFeatureExtract with simplied controls
Surfaces are specified as a list and the controls applied to each, e.g. in the
rhoPimpleFoam/RAS/annularThermalMixer tutorial:

    surfaces
    (
        "AMI.obj"
        "shaft.obj"
        "wall.obj"
        "statorBlades.obj"
        "rotorBlades.obj"
    );

    includedAngle   150;  // Identifes a feature when angle
                      // between faces < includedAngle
    trimFeatures
    {
        minElem         10;   // minimum edges within a feature
    }

    writeObj        yes;  // writes out _edgeMesh.obj files to view features

If different controls are required for different surfaces multiple
sub-dictionaries can be used:

    AMIsurfaces
    {
        surfaces
        (
            "AMI.obj"
        );

        includedAngle   140;  // Identifes a feature when angle
                          // between faces < includedAngle
        trimFeatures
        {
            minElem         8;   // minimum edges within a feature
        }

        writeObj        yes;  // writes out _edgeMesh.obj files to view features
    }

    otherSurfaces
    {
        surfaces
        (
            "shaft.obj"
            "wall.obj"
            "statorBlades.obj"
            "rotorBlades.obj"
        );

        includedAngle   150;  // Identifes a feature when angle
                          // between faces < includedAngle
        trimFeatures
        {
            minElem         10;   // minimum edges within a feature
        }

        writeObj        yes;  // writes out _edgeMesh.obj files to view features
    }

Existing feature edge files corresponding to particular surfaces can be specified using
the "files" association list:

    surfaces
    (
        "AMI.obj"
        "shaft.obj"
        "wall.obj"
        "statorBlades.obj"
        "rotorBlades.obj"
    );

    files
    (
        "AMI.obj" "constant/triSurface/AMI.obj.eMesh";
    );

    includedAngle   150;  // Identifes a feature when angle
                      // between faces < includedAngle
    trimFeatures
    {
        minElem         10;   // minimum edges within a feature
    }

    writeObj        yes;  // writes out _edgeMesh.obj files to view features
2018-04-20 15:23:28 +01:00