Hello Sean Vogel
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2011年4月13日 GMT-4 10:58
I am having the same problem, if I set the density up to 100 kg/m^3 it works, but if I set it to 1000 kg/m^3 it won't converge. Also, I can't lower the viscosity or else it won't converge either.
I am having the same problem, if I set the density up to 100 kg/m^3 it works, but if I set it to 1000 kg/m^3 it won't converge. Also, I can't lower the viscosity or else it won't converge either.
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2011年4月13日 GMT-4 12:26
Hi
you can have many issues, I believe here as you describe it.
First of all "out" means that COMSOL has passed the desired value and is saving it to the results data set file (its not skipping. Depending on how you set the solver it will not necessarily calculate strictly for your points you defined (=strict time stepping) it might take large steps and interpolate. This behavior is OK for asymptotically converging solutions such as diffusion cases, but can be disastrous for periodic excitation functions, hence one need to tweak the time solver settings and change from "Auto" to "strict "or even "intermediate", see the doc
when you have such conversion issues, it can come from initial conditions too far from the final result, or difficulties to get the initial trend (I mostly add some initial conditions and start my stepping such that I have some small load/flux active for the first step. But it could as likely, or perhaps more likely ? come from a dependent variable scaling issue. Then one must estimate the result and give manual scaling values in the solver settings to normalize the result to around "1". This requires often to solve the case in a simple "one physics" variant and to use th preliminary results as scaling factor
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
you can have many issues, I believe here as you describe it.
First of all "out" means that COMSOL has passed the desired value and is saving it to the results data set file (its not skipping. Depending on how you set the solver it will not necessarily calculate strictly for your points you defined (=strict time stepping) it might take large steps and interpolate. This behavior is OK for asymptotically converging solutions such as diffusion cases, but can be disastrous for periodic excitation functions, hence one need to tweak the time solver settings and change from "Auto" to "strict "or even "intermediate", see the doc
when you have such conversion issues, it can come from initial conditions too far from the final result, or difficulties to get the initial trend (I mostly add some initial conditions and start my stepping such that I have some small load/flux active for the first step. But it could as likely, or perhaps more likely ? come from a dependent variable scaling issue. Then one must estimate the result and give manual scaling values in the solver settings to normalize the result to around "1". This requires often to solve the case in a simple "one physics" variant and to use th preliminary results as scaling factor
--
Good luck
Ivar