Magnus Ringh
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
6 years ago
2018年10月17日 GMT-4 08:27
Updated:
6 years ago
2018年10月17日 GMT-4 08:30
Hi Asal,
Yes, you can do it by clearing the Store in output check box in the Field nodes for the dependent variables that you do not want to store. The Field nodes appear under Solver Configurations>Solution>Dependent Variables (you may need to right-click the Study node and choose Show Default Solver to see the solver configuration nodes). Also see the following blog post:
https://www.comsol.com/blogs/minimize-your-model-file-size-with-storing-solution-techniques/
Best regards,
Magnus Ringh, COMSOL
Hi Asal,
Yes, you can do it by clearing the **Store in output** check box in the **Field** nodes for the dependent variables that you do not want to store. The **Field** nodes appear under **Solver Configurations>Solution>Dependent Variables** (you may need to right-click the **Study** node and choose **Show Default Solver** to see the solver configuration nodes). Also see the following blog post:
Best regards,
Magnus Ringh, COMSOL
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Posted:
6 years ago
2018年11月8日 GMT-5 04:28
Dear Magnus,
thank you. As I am doing one way coupling of T and (V,P) so that I solve the model for V and P then use these results to solve for T, then unchecking the variables of V and P in the store solution looks like there is not fluid flow modelled and is pure conduction. Is there any other way?
Regards, Asal
Dear Magnus,
thank you. As I am doing one way coupling of T and (V,P) so that I solve the model for V and P then use these results to solve for T, then unchecking the variables of V and P in the store solution looks like there is not fluid flow modelled and is pure conduction. Is there any other way?
Regards, Asal
Jeff Hiller
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
6 years ago
2018年11月8日 GMT-5 11:16
Hello Asal,
What variables you choose to store in the output does not affect the equations that are solved. In particular, not storing the velocity vector will not make it a pure conduction problem.
So if the solution of your model appears to reflect pure conduction, it is likely that you did not specify the velocity field correctly for the convective term (That's happened to me a couple of times:) ), or that the convective effects in this particular problem are so small that their impact on the solution are drowned out by the conduction.
Best,
Jeff
-------------------
Jeff Hiller
Hello Asal,
What variables you choose to store in the output does not affect the equations that are solved. In particular, not storing the velocity vector will not make it a pure conduction problem.
So if the solution of your model appears to reflect pure conduction, it is likely that you did not specify the velocity field correctly for the convective term (That's happened to me a couple of times:) ), or that the convective effects in this particular problem are so small that their impact on the solution are drowned out by the conduction.
Best,
Jeff
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Posted:
6 years ago
2018年11月8日 GMT-5 11:22
Dear Jeff,
Many thanks. So I attached my initial values set up for second sub-study (T). what you are saying is that even with this arrangement, I can still uncheck the v,p in the store solutions?
Regards, Asal
Dear Jeff,
Many thanks. So I attached my initial values set up for second sub-study (T). what you are saying is that even with this arrangement, I can still uncheck the v,p in the store solutions?
Regards, Asal