Difference between revisions of "First simulation by Jozsef Nagy"
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You will familiarize yourself with the terminal in Linux, where you will run all your simulations in OpenFOAM. You will also get a first idea on the work flow, that you have to follow in order to run a successful simulation. | You will familiarize yourself with the terminal in Linux, where you will run all your simulations in OpenFOAM. You will also get a first idea on the work flow, that you have to follow in order to run a successful simulation. | ||
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+ | You can download the .msh file here: | ||
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+ | [https:// drive.google.com/file/d/0B7cQdWsMw_2uYXdUVEJMNUJzdmM/edit?usp=sharing msh-file] |
Revision as of 08:53, 19 September 2016
- author: Jozsef Nagy
- affiliation: Institute of Polymer Injection Molding and Process Automation, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria
- contact: jozsef.nagy@jku.at
- OpenFOAM version: 2.3.0
- published under: CC BY-NC-SA license (creative commons licenses)
Go back to Day 1.
First simulation in OpenFOAM
In these videos
you will learn about
- the basic case setup of OpenFOAM
- the initial values of your simulation
- the mesh (e.g. the boundaries)
- running the simulation of the flow in a 2D elbow case with three different meshes
- postprocessing
You will familiarize yourself with the terminal in Linux, where you will run all your simulations in OpenFOAM. You will also get a first idea on the work flow, that you have to follow in order to run a successful simulation.
You can download the .msh file here:
[https:// drive.google.com/file/d/0B7cQdWsMw_2uYXdUVEJMNUJzdmM/edit?usp=sharing msh-file]