Henry Weller 009203188f blockMesh: New experimental support for projecting block face point to geometric surfaces
For example, to mesh a sphere with a single block the geometry is defined in the
blockMeshDict as a searchableSurface:

    geometry
    {
        sphere
        {
            type searchableSphere;
            centre (0 0 0);
            radius 1;
        }
    }

The vertices, block topology and curved edges are defined in the usual
way, for example

    v 0.5773502;
    mv -0.5773502;

    a 0.7071067;
    ma -0.7071067;

    vertices
    (
        ($mv $mv $mv)
        ( $v $mv $mv)
        ( $v  $v $mv)
        ($mv  $v $mv)
        ($mv $mv  $v)
        ( $v $mv  $v)
        ( $v  $v  $v)
        ($mv  $v  $v)
    );

    blocks
    (
        hex (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7) (10 10 10) simpleGrading (1 1 1)
    );

    edges
    (
        arc 0 1 (0 $ma $ma)
        arc 2 3 (0 $a $ma)
        arc 6 7 (0 $a $a)
        arc 4 5 (0 $ma $a)

        arc 0 3 ($ma 0 $ma)
        arc 1 2 ($a 0 $ma)
        arc 5 6 ($a 0 $a)
        arc 4 7 ($ma 0 $a)

        arc 0 4 ($ma $ma 0)
        arc 1 5 ($a $ma 0)
        arc 2 6 ($a $a 0)
        arc 3 7 ($ma $a 0)
    );

which will produce a mesh in which the block edges conform to the sphere
but the faces of the block lie somewhere between the original cube and
the spherical surface which is a consequence of the edge-based
transfinite interpolation.

Now the projection of the block faces to the geometry specified above
can also be specified:

    faces
    (
        project (0 4 7 3) sphere
        project (2 6 5 1) sphere
        project (1 5 4 0) sphere
        project (3 7 6 2) sphere
        project (0 3 2 1) sphere
        project (4 5 6 7) sphere
    );

which produces a mesh that actually conforms to the sphere.

See OpenFOAM-dev/tutorials/mesh/blockMesh/sphere

This functionality is experimental and will undergo further development
and generalization in the future to support more complex surfaces,
feature edge specification and extraction etc.  Please get involved if
you would like to see blockMesh become a more flexible block-structured
mesher.

Henry G. Weller, CFD Direct.
2016-10-13 15:05:24 +01:00
2016-08-20 09:33:11 +01:00
2016-10-09 15:15:29 +01:00

README for OpenFOAM-dev

#

About OpenFOAM

OpenFOAM is a free, open source computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software package released by the OpenFOAM Foundation. It has a large user base across most areas of engineering and science, from both commercial and academic organisations. OpenFOAM has an extensive range of features to solve anything from complex fluid flows involving chemical reactions, turbulence and heat transfer, to solid dynamics and electromagnetics.

Copyright

OpenFOAM is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. See the file COPYING in this directory or http://www.gnu.org/licenses/, for a description of the GNU General Public License terms under which you can copy the files.

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