Jeff Hiller
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
3 years ago
2021年8月20日 GMT-4 14:06
Updated:
3 years ago
2021年8月20日 GMT-4 15:43
Hello Manish,
Speaking in general terms, there are at least two approaches available to you to handle a situation like this one:
1. use a swept mesh in the thin layers
2. switch to a surface formulation ("shell elements" in structural mechanics terminology) instead of a volumetric formulation to represent the thin layers, thereby altogether eliminating the need to mesh them three-dimensionally.
I don't know your area of engineering well enough to determine if option 2 above is an option for you. Perhaps other Discussion Forum readers can comment on that. As far as option 1, you will find examples of it in the chapter on meshing in the Reference Manual, or watch this video from the Learning Center.
Best regards,
Jeff
-------------------
Jeff Hiller
Hello Manish,
Speaking in general terms, there are at least two approaches available to you to handle a situation like this one:
1. use a swept mesh in the thin layers
2. switch to a surface formulation ("shell elements" in structural mechanics terminology) instead of a volumetric formulation to represent the thin layers, thereby altogether eliminating the need to mesh them three-dimensionally.
I don't know your area of engineering well enough to determine if option 2 above is an option for you. Perhaps other Discussion Forum readers can comment on that. As far as option 1, you will find examples of it in the chapter on meshing in the Reference Manual, or watch [this video](https://www.comsol.com/learning-center/building-the-mesh-for-a-model-geometry-in-comsol-multiphysics) from the Learning Center.
Best regards,
Jeff
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
3 years ago
2021年8月21日 GMT-4 10:11
Thank you.
I watched video it was very informative but still i am not able to mesh my another geometry. I am attaching file. it has 1nm size graphene layer and 28micrometer thick silica slab. or if you suggest physics to convert volume into surface in wave optic physics.
Thank you.
I watched video it was very informative but still i am not able to mesh my another geometry. I am attaching file. it has 1nm size graphene layer and 28micrometer thick silica slab. or if you suggest physics to convert volume into surface in wave optic physics.