Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
85a9e17dd5 reactingEulerFoam: Added phase transfer structure
An additional layer has been added into the phase system hierarchy which
facilitates the application of phase transfer modelling. These are
models which exchange mass between phases without the thermal coupling
that would be required to represent phase change. They can be thought of
as representation changes; e.g., between two phases representing
different droplet sizes of the same physical fluid.

To facilitate this, the heat transfer phase systems have been modified
and renamed and now both support mass transfer. The two sided version
is only required for derivations which support phase change.

The following changes to case settings have been made:

- The simplest instantiated phase systems have been renamed to
basicTwoPhaseSystem and basicMultiphaseSystem. The
heatAndMomentumTransfer*System entries in constant/phaseProperties files
will need updating accordingly.

- A phaseTransfer sub-model entry will be required in the
constant/phaseProperties file. This can be an empty list.

- The massTransfer switch in thermal phase change cases has been renamed
phaseTransfer, so as not to be confused with the mass transfer models
used by interface composition cases.

This work was supported by Georg Skillas and Zhen Li, at Evonik
2018-04-05 15:11:39 +01:00
ef885b407c reactingEulerFoam: Corrected blending in tutorials
Sub-model blending should be set such that the sum of all the blending
coefficients equals one. If there are three models specified for a phase
pair (e.g., (air in water), (water in air) and (air and water)), then
the sum-to-one constraint is guaranteed by the blending functions.
Frequently, however, the symmetric model ((air and water) in this
example) is omitted. In that case, the blending coefficients should be
selected so that the sum of just the two non-symmetric coefficients
equal one.

In the case of linear blending, this means setting the minimum partially
continuous alpha to one-minus the fully continuous value of the opposite
phase. For example:

   blending
   {
       default
       {
           type            linear;
           minFullyContinuousAlpha.air 0.7;
           minPartlyContinuousAlpha.air 0.3;
           minFullyContinuousAlpha.water 0.7;
           minPartlyContinuousAlpha.water 0.3;
       }
   }

The reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam and reactingMultiPhaseEulerFoam tutorials
have been modified to adhere to this principle.
2018-03-23 09:38:17 +00:00
984c4a2b51 runTools: getApplication utilises foamDictionary
This change means that getApplication still works if we have a
controlDict.orig, rather than a controlDict. This allows us to simplify
the scripting of tutorials in which the controlDict is modified.
2018-02-28 10:20:45 +00:00
6e143e5ab0 reactingEulerFoam: Added wall-boiling and phase change capability to populationBalance functionality
Introduced thermalPhaseChangePopulationBalanceTwo- and MultiphaseSystem as
user-selectable phaseSystems which are the first to actually use multiple mass
transfer mechanisms enabled by

commit d3a237f560.

The functionality is demonstrated using the reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam
wallBoilingPolydisperse tutorial.

Patch contributed by VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd and Institute
of Fluid Dynamics, Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf (HZDR).
2018-01-24 14:57:14 +00:00
57fa56ae7b tutorials/multiphase/reacting.*EulerFoam Allrun Allclean: Corrected file permissions 2017-12-31 20:09:10 +00:00
d3a237f560 reactingEulerFoam: Multiphase thermal phase change and support for multiple mass transfer mechanisms
- Thermal phase change and wall boiling functionality has been generalized to
  support two- and multi- phase simulations.
- Thermal phase change now also allows purePhaseModel, which simplifies case setup.
- The phaseSystem templates have been restructured in preparation of multiple
  simultaneous mass transfer mechanisms. For example, combination of thermal phase
  and inhomogeneous population balance models.

Patch contributed by VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd and Institute
of Fluid Dynamics, Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf (HZDR).
2017-12-31 19:50:22 +00:00