Difference between revisions of "Complex materials"

From OpenFOAM Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 10: Line 10:
 
* Håkan Nilsson's collection [http://www.tfd.chalmers.se/~hani/kurser/OS_CFD/] comprises some reports that cover Complex Materials related topics.
 
* Håkan Nilsson's collection [http://www.tfd.chalmers.se/~hani/kurser/OS_CFD/] comprises some reports that cover Complex Materials related topics.
 
* [https://sourceforge.net/p/foam-extend/foam-extend-4.0/ci/master/tree/tutorials/viscoelastic/viscoelasticFluidFoam/ Viscoelastic solvers tutorials] available in foam-extend 4.0
 
* [https://sourceforge.net/p/foam-extend/foam-extend-4.0/ci/master/tree/tutorials/viscoelastic/viscoelasticFluidFoam/ Viscoelastic solvers tutorials] available in foam-extend 4.0
 +
* Jozsef Nagy, Lorenz Reith, Michael Fischlschweiger, Georg Steinbichler:  [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0009250915000755 ''Influence of fiber orientation and geometry variation on flow phenomena and reactive polymerization of ϵ-caprolactam''], Chemical Engineering Science, Volume 128, p. 1-10 25 May 2015

Revision as of 08:23, 31 March 2017

OpenFOAM has the ability to deal with complex materials, whose behavior is referred as non-Newtonian, which can be both inelastic (Generalized Newtonian) and viscoleastic. Below you can find the list of tutorials that cover modelling of complex materials.

Go back to Collection by topic.

Complex materials

New constitutive models

  • This tutorial by Gavin Tabor shows how to implement and use a new constitutive equation (the Casson model) adequate to capture the behavior of chocolate and blood.

Further reading