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Linking a Porous Media Flow to a Transport of Concentrated Species
Posted 2013年4月8日 GMT-4 11:29 Fluid & Heat, Microfluidics, Battery Design, Geometry, Materials, Modeling Tools & Definitions, Parameters, Variables, & Functions 2 Replies
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Hello,
I have created a chamber that has sugar water running through a compartment and carbon cloth modeled by a free and porous media flow physics. I also want to create a transport of a concentrated species to model where the sugar is in the solution as it flows through this chamber. My questions are as follows:
Is it possible to link a transport of concentrated species physics to a porous media flow physics while using incomplete geometries? I don't care where the sugar end up in the carbon cloth, so I have deselected it for the geometries, and have been receiving negative feedback from the software.
How do you handle a physics when certain parts of the geometry have different characteristics? For example, the carbon cloth would have a different diffusion coefficient in comparison to the purely fluid filled chamber, however I cannot find where I can mathematically represent this.
Thanks in advance for any help.
-Payton G
I have created a chamber that has sugar water running through a compartment and carbon cloth modeled by a free and porous media flow physics. I also want to create a transport of a concentrated species to model where the sugar is in the solution as it flows through this chamber. My questions are as follows:
Is it possible to link a transport of concentrated species physics to a porous media flow physics while using incomplete geometries? I don't care where the sugar end up in the carbon cloth, so I have deselected it for the geometries, and have been receiving negative feedback from the software.
How do you handle a physics when certain parts of the geometry have different characteristics? For example, the carbon cloth would have a different diffusion coefficient in comparison to the purely fluid filled chamber, however I cannot find where I can mathematically represent this.
Thanks in advance for any help.
-Payton G
2 Replies Last Post 2014年4月10日 GMT-4 12:27