Community
CFD Forum
Welcome to Autodesk’s CFD Forums. Share your knowledge, ask questions, and explore popular CFD topics.
cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Inviscid Analysis

25 REPLIES 25
SOLVED
Reply
Message 1 of 26
matthew.brown
1401 Views, 25 Replies

Inviscid Analysis

Does anybody have an idea of how one might approach an inviscid (essentially potential flow) analysis using CFDesign/Simulation CFD?  Is this even possible?  Any advice would be appreciated.  Thanks.

25 REPLIES 25
Message 2 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

Hi Matt,

 

This is possible!

 

Procedure for simulating an Euler (inviscid) flow solution with standard solvers:

1. Create a material with a viscosity of 0 (or very close to 0).

2. Assign slip to all the solid walls

 

This removes viscosity from the solution.

 

Another option is that you could use the 'Quick Forced' solver (Quick Forced has a potential flow solver).  Solving for potential flow naturally ignores wall constraints and fluid visocity so the above settings do not need to be followed.

 

Note: a viscosity that is exactly 0 can cause solution instability. If you see this, use a value that is very close to 0 (such as 0.000001 Poise).

 

(LINK)



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 3 of 26
matthew.brown
in reply to: Royce_adsk

Royce,

Thanks! I will give this a shot.   I am curious though, why the slip BC at the walls? 

Message 4 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

When you make the assumption of Inviscid flow you also expect that there be slip at the walls, therefore you need to add the slips.  Otherwise you would still get a 0 velocity along the walls.

 

-Royce



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 5 of 26

This (sort of) worked.  I was not able to get it to run smoothly using viscosities less than 1e-4 poise, and even then I needed the 'Check Velocity Distribution' flag file command to get it to finish.  Ultimately, however, this did not get me to the results I was shooting for.  There is still a large amount of laminar separation, which is what I was trying to avoid, so that I could check the results of a potential flow calculation.  Any thoughts?

Message 6 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

Would is be possible for you to share your support share file?  Would you consider it NDA or have something that you could mock up quickly?  Otherwise we will have to take it offline to a real case.

 

-Royce



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 7 of 26

Royce,

 It is not proprietary.  The file is supposed to represent an annular NACA 66(2)-015 airfoil.  There are experimental and potential analysis results published in Lewis, 'Vortex Element Methods for Fluid Dynamic Analysis of Engineering Systems' Cambridge University Press, (C) 1991.  He offers a Pascal code in the back which we are trying to use, but his code results do not match what he published.  We are trying to decide if his results are incorrect or if it is his code that is faulty.  The analysis is laminar and axisymmetric in X.  Also, I am using CFDesign 2010 not Simulation CFD if that makes a difference.

 

That all being said, the website will not let me attach a *.cfz file.  I get the following error:

 

Message 8 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

That is odd.

 

Change the extension to .cfz.txt

 

-Royce



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 9 of 26

Here ya go!

Message 10 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

Matt,

 

Do you have access to CFD 2012?

 

-Royce



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 11 of 26

Royce,

I do.  We have been avoiding using it though because it has been very problematic for us. I can run this in 2012 overnight if you think it will make a difference.

Message 12 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

Just checking so that if I do some test on my end I can give you a share file to try out on yours.

 

-Royce



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 13 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: Royce_adsk

Can you give more detail on what you are looking for in the results?

 

-Royce



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 14 of 26

Royce,

We are comparing pressure coefficient and velocity ratio distribution.    I have attached the published results for your reference.

 

Message 15 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

Matt,

 

Here are my results from last night.  Do they look reasonable to your expectations?

 

-Royce

 

1-19-2012 8-21-34 AM.png



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 16 of 26

Royce,

This is basically what I was seeing.  This really isn't very similar to a potential flow solution though.  There would not be low velocity regions on the airfoil surface (indicating separation), rather the flow would be attached and tangent all along the wall.  The problem is probably too basic for this software to handle.  This isn't too bad though.  It will still give us something close, I think.  Thanks for the effort!

Message 17 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

Matt,

 

One last thing for you to checkout.  I turned on the quick forced flow solver.  When Quick Forced Convection is enabled, the flow is computed using a potential flow computation that is complete in one iteration.  When there is no heat transfer boundary conditions present, the heat transfer portion of the analysis is skipped.

 

-Royce

 

quick forced.png



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Message 18 of 26

Royce,

PERFECT!!!  This is exactly what I was trying to do.  Thanks! 

-Matt

Message 19 of 26

You should be able to run a potential flow solution using the "Quick Forced" option on the "Solve-Physics" widget. You don't need to set any thermal conditions. This should give you a potential flow solution to your problem.

Message 20 of 26
Royce_adsk
in reply to: matthew.brown

Matt,

 

Here is my share file.  If you could share your results on how they compare to the published results, that would be excellent!

 

Thanks,

Royce



Royce.Abel
Technical Support Manager

Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.

Post to forums  

Autodesk Design & Make Report