Introduction To CFX-5
Introduction To CFX-5
Introduction To CFX-5
Introduction to CFD
Page 93 CFX-5.7.1
Introduction to CFX-5
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Introduction to CFD
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Uses of CFD
CFD is used by engineers and scientists in a wide range of fields. Typical applications
include:
• Process industry: Mixing vessels, chemical reactors
• Building services: Ventilation of buildings, such as atria
• Health and safety: Investigating the effects of fire and smoke
• Motor industry: Combustion modelling, car aerodynamics
• Electronics: Heat transfer within and around circuit boards
• Environmental: Dispersion of pollutants in air or water
• Power and energy: Optimisation of combustion processes
• Medical: Blood flow through grafted blood vessels
CFD Methodology
CFD may be used to determine the performance of a component at the design stage or it
can be used to analyse difficulties with an existing component and lead to its improved
design.
For example, the pressure drop through a component may be considered excessive:
The geometry of the region of interest is then defined. If the geometry already exists in CAD,
it can be imported directly. The mesh is then created. After importing the mesh into the pre-
processor, other elements of the simulation including the boundary conditions (inlets,
outlets etc.) and fluid properties are defined,.
The flow solver is run to produce a file of results which contain the variation of velocity,
pressure and any other variables throughout the region of interest.
The results can be visualised and provide the engineer an understanding of the behaviour
of the fluid throughout the region of interest.
Geometry/Mesh
This interactive process is the first pre-processing stage. The objective is to produce a mesh
for input to the physics pre-processor. Before a mesh can be produced, a closed geometric
solid is required. The geometry and mesh can be created in CAD2Mesh or any of the other
geometry/mesh creation tools. The basic steps involve:
1. Defining the geometry of the region of interest.
2. Creating regions of fluid flow, solid regions and surface boundary names.
3. Setting properties for the mesh.
This pre-processing stage is now highly automated. In CFX-5, geometry can be imported
from most major CAD packages using native format, and the mesh of control volumes is
generated automatically.
Physics Definition
This interactive process is the second pre-processing stage and is used to create input
required by the Solver. The mesh files are loaded into the physics pre-processor, CFX-Pre.
The physical models which are to be included in the simulation are selected. Fluid
properties and boundary conditions are specified.
The Solver
The component which solves the CFD problem is called the Solver. It produces the required
results in a non-interactive/batch process. It CFD problem is solved as follows:
1. The partial differential equations are integrated over all the control volumes in the region
of interest. This is equivalent to applying a basic conservation law (e.g. for mass or
momentum) to each control volume.
2. These integral equations are converted to a system of algebraic equations by generating
a set of approximations for the terms in the integral equations.
3. The algebraic equations are solved iteratively.
The Post-processor
The post-processor is the component used to analyse, visualise and present the results
interactively. Post-processing includes anything from obtaining point values to complex
animated sequences.
Examples of some important features of post-processors are:
• Visualisation of the geometry and control volumes
• Vector plots showing the direction and magnitude of the flow
• Visualisation of the variation of scalar variables (variables which have only magnitude,
not direction, such as temperature, pressure and speed) through the domain
• Quantitative numerical calculations
• Animation
• Charts showing graphical plots of variables
• Hardcopy output