Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2012年2月25日 GMT-5 08:25
Hi
you have at least 2 simple ways: deine a workplane in 3D open it draw a circle, then under the Layer tab, enter a thickness for your wall and you will have the second cylinder, alternative you duplicate your circle and change the radius., then you extrude. With this you get 2 concentric cylinders (note you could have made directly the 2 cylinders in 3D with the cylinder volume (including the layer).
Like this your model is set up for a tube (external) with water inside, hence you have 2 entities (domains in this case) that you may select in the FEM physics section.
If you have no fluid in the middle, and want a hollow cylinder you have also a few options, either you do a difference large_cylinder - small cylinder (or you do it on the circels before you extrude).
Often what people do is to make the hollow cylinder and the add again the fluid in the middle. This is not required, as when you pass the "Geometry Finish" line you geometrical object are analysed and transformed into numbered and unique Entities (domains, boundaries, edges points, to which you can attach physics or BC ...)) ANd passing the Finish line both methodes give 2 domains, but the second method has a few extra operations one can as well skip. The geoemtry objects has nothing to do with the final physics, the mapping to the physical parts is done on the Entities after having united and analysed the geometry
Hope I'm clair enough, this operation took me some time to really catch, but once you have got the principle, it feels all natural
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
you have at least 2 simple ways: deine a workplane in 3D open it draw a circle, then under the Layer tab, enter a thickness for your wall and you will have the second cylinder, alternative you duplicate your circle and change the radius., then you extrude. With this you get 2 concentric cylinders (note you could have made directly the 2 cylinders in 3D with the cylinder volume (including the layer).
Like this your model is set up for a tube (external) with water inside, hence you have 2 entities (domains in this case) that you may select in the FEM physics section.
If you have no fluid in the middle, and want a hollow cylinder you have also a few options, either you do a difference large_cylinder - small cylinder (or you do it on the circels before you extrude).
Often what people do is to make the hollow cylinder and the add again the fluid in the middle. This is not required, as when you pass the "Geometry Finish" line you geometrical object are analysed and transformed into numbered and unique Entities (domains, boundaries, edges points, to which you can attach physics or BC ...)) ANd passing the Finish line both methodes give 2 domains, but the second method has a few extra operations one can as well skip. The geoemtry objects has nothing to do with the final physics, the mapping to the physical parts is done on the Entities after having united and analysed the geometry
Hope I'm clair enough, this operation took me some time to really catch, but once you have got the principle, it feels all natural
--
Good luck
Ivar