Hello Julien Givernaud
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Posted:
9 years ago
2015年12月23日 GMT-5 11:20
Hi Julien,
I am facing a similar problem. I am working on a 3D model of an Induction machine. 2D seems to be working fine, but in 3D it appears that the Default Continuity i.e. Magnetic Insulation doesn't work. The flux seems to be limited to the stator iron, I expect it to cross the airgap and enter partly into the rotor as well. In 2D, that is what happens.
Did you manage to solve your problem?
Best,
Faisal.
Hi Julien,
I am facing a similar problem. I am working on a 3D model of an Induction machine. 2D seems to be working fine, but in 3D it appears that the Default Continuity i.e. Magnetic Insulation doesn't work. The flux seems to be limited to the stator iron, I expect it to cross the airgap and enter partly into the rotor as well. In 2D, that is what happens.
Did you manage to solve your problem?
Best,
Faisal.
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Posted:
9 years ago
2016年1月4日 GMT-5 04:52
Hi Faisal,
No I have give up assembly geometry because of this problem.
Julien
Hi Faisal,
No I have give up assembly geometry because of this problem.
Julien
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Posted:
9 years ago
2016年1月4日 GMT-5 05:58
Hi Julien,
Thanks for the reply.
If you eventually did not employ Assembly, would you kindly let me know how did you manage to make a part of geometry rotating and a part stationary? I am not sure how it is possible without that.
Best,
Faisal.
Hi Julien,
Thanks for the reply.
If you eventually did not employ Assembly, would you kindly let me know how did you manage to make a part of geometry rotating and a part stationary? I am not sure how it is possible without that.
Best,
Faisal.
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Posted:
9 years ago
2016年1月4日 GMT-5 08:46
I am not solving rotating problems, only small deformations due to magnetic pressure.
Julien
I am not solving rotating problems, only small deformations due to magnetic pressure.
Julien
Magnus Olsson
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
9 years ago
2016年1月5日 GMT-5 03:06
Hi Faisal and Julien,
It is a known issue that, for vector element based physics, assembly pair continuity requires identical meshing of source and destination sides (and then of course no relative motion between sides) for the model to be numerically stable. The reason is that in Maxwell-Ampère's law, the equation of continuity is inherent, i.e. by taking the divergence of both sides of
curl(H) = J
one gets
div(J) = 0
At an assembly boundary with non-conforming meshes, the interpolation errors will result in significant current sources/imbalances and hence an inconsistent right-hand side to the first equation. I should add that there is no known stabilization method for this problem.
This is explained in the model
ACDC_Module/Motors_and_Actuators/rotating_machinery_3d_tutorial
which also shows how to get around the problem by using a magnetic scalar potential formulation (magnetostatic approximation) on both sides of the assembly pair (in the air gap region).
Best regards,
Magnus
Hi Faisal and Julien,
It is a known issue that, for vector element based physics, assembly pair continuity requires identical meshing of source and destination sides (and then of course no relative motion between sides) for the model to be numerically stable. The reason is that in Maxwell-Ampère's law, the equation of continuity is inherent, i.e. by taking the divergence of both sides of
curl(H) = J
one gets
div(J) = 0
At an assembly boundary with non-conforming meshes, the interpolation errors will result in significant current sources/imbalances and hence an inconsistent right-hand side to the first equation. I should add that there is no known stabilization method for this problem.
This is explained in the model
ACDC_Module/Motors_and_Actuators/rotating_machinery_3d_tutorial
which also shows how to get around the problem by using a magnetic scalar potential formulation (magnetostatic approximation) on both sides of the assembly pair (in the air gap region).
Best regards,
Magnus