This boundary condition now solves for the wall temperature by interval
bisection, which should be significantly more robust than the previous
fixed-point iteration procedure. There is a new non-dimensional
"tolerance" setting that controls how tightly this solution procedure
solves the wall temperature. The "relax" setting is no longer used.
The boundary condition no longer triggers re-evaluation of the
temperature condition in order to re-calculate the heat flux within the
solution iteration. Instead, it extracts physical coefficients from the
form of the boundary condition and uses these to form a linearised
approximation of the heat flux. This is a more general approach, and
will not trigger side-effects associated with re-evaluating the
temperature condition.
The fixedMultiphaseHeatFlux condition has been replaced by a
uniformFixedMultiphaseHeatFlux condition, which constructs a mixed
constraint which portions a specified heat flux between the phases in
such a way as to keep the boundary temperature uniform across all
phases. This can be applied to all phases. It is no longer necessary to
apply a heat flux model to one "master" phase, then map the resulting
temperature to the others. An example specification of this boundary
condition is as follows:
wall
{
type uniformFixedMultiphaseHeatFlux;
q 1000;
relax 0.3;
value $internalField;
}
The wall boiling tutorials have been updated to use these new functions,
and time-varying heat input has been used to replace the
stop-modify-restart pattern present in the single-region cases.