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Purpose:

Purpose:. To provide more CFD background in Training / Demos To be able to answer more of those difficult questions To show industry standard or rule of thumb approaches to using CFD To provide advice about what to do when things go wrong. Theory:. Dynamic Thermal Model:

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Purpose:

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  1. Purpose: To provide more CFD background in Training / Demos To be able to answer more of those difficult questions To show industry standard or rule of thumb approaches to using CFD To provide advice about what to do when things go wrong

  2. Theory: Dynamic Thermal Model: Each room has lumped air volume – single air temperature. Apache uses algorithms to calculate surface heat transfer coefficients for convective heat transfer from air volume to fabric. Unsteady one-dimensional heat transfer by conduction. Apache uses finite difference numerical solution in one dimension through fabric only. Simplified form of the Fourier equation which is itself a simplified form of the general energy equation used in MicroFlo Apache employs shortwave and longwave surface radiation heat transfer models.

  3. Theory: CFD Model: Steady three-dimensional convection-conduction heat transfer and fluid flow. MicroFlo uses finite volume numerical solution throughout domain volume. MicroFlo can be adapted to handle unsteady flows. MicroFlo uses a turbulence model in conjunction with wall functions. Wall functions are used to calculate the flux of heat and momentum in the near-wall regions and are analogous to surface heat transfer coefficients used in conventional thermal modelling. No radiation model – boundary conditions include the radiation transfer from Dynamic Thermal Model The grid employed by MicroFlo is a structured non-uniform rectilinear cartesian grid and in order to cater for irregular spaces, obstructions, sloping surfaces, etc. MicroFlo incorporates a ‘blocking-off’ procedure whereby grid cells that are located within solid regions in the flow domain are rendered inactive (i.e. setting the velocity components to zero) .

  4. Flux Balance: Net flux of variable into volume due to convection Net flux of variable into volume due to diffusion Amount of variable created in volume Change in variable with time = + + Where a variable is Mass, Energy, Momentum (x, y, z velocity)

  5. Flux Balance Rearranged: Net flux of variable into volume due to convection Net flux of variable into volume due to diffusion Amount of variable created in volume + + = 0 This ONLY occurs when everything is balanced when a CFD model is converging the equation looks like….

  6. Flux Balance Residual Error: Net flux of variable into volume due to convection Net flux of variable into volume due to diffusion Amount of variable created in volume Residual Error + + = The closer the Error to Zero the closer to a balanced flux and the closer to the TRUE answer. CFD gets closer to the answer by iterating, that is having an initial guess – supplied by the user – and the repeatedly changing the guess until the error reduces to an acceptable level

  7. Flux Balance Residual Error: U – x velocity V – y velocity W – z velocity T – temperature K – creation of turbulent energy Ε – dissipation of turbulent energy M – mass continuity The plotted value here is the maximum calculated residual, if the value gets smaller during the iterations, as above, it is approaching an acceptable solution or converging

  8. Flux Balance Residual Error: U – x velocity V – y velocity W – z velocity T – temperature K – creation of turbulent energy Ε – dissipation of turbulent energy M – mass continuity If the value gets larger, as above, it is NOT approaching an acceptable solution i.e. diverging

  9. Iterations – searching for the answer: Three issues to consider: • Converging to the correct answer • Diverging • Converging to the wrong answer

  10. Iterations – converging to the right answer: Consider that the flux balance in a volume is represented by something simple like y = x2 (In reality the equations are much more complicated!) The answer/solution for balance is 0 (02 = 0) But if this wasn’t obvious a way to find the answer would have been to guess a starting point (Initial Condition) and then iterate to find a solution: Guess x=2 22=4 (residual error) Too Big Guess x=1 12=1 Too Big etc etc…

  11. Iterations – converging to the wrong answer: 2nd guess 1st guess 3rd guess x2 - 1 Two possible answers – physical answer?? Actual answer

  12. Iterations Problems in convergence are connected with deriving the pressure field. The continuity based pressure correction equation and the resulting outer iterative scheme involves the continuing re-calculation of dependent variable coefficients. It’s this inter-linkage that causes problems, i.e. each outer iteration involves the partial solution of all of the equation sets (using inner iterative schemes) and the re-calculation of the dependent variable coefficients using the most up-to-date dependent variable values, the outer iterations being repeated until a converged solution is achieved. Numerical procedure is very robust and is unlikely to fail.

  13. Good Answer?: • The results from a converged solution may not (it is unlikely) be the correct physical results how do we know? • Check the results – hand calculations • Is the solution dependant upon the grid - Mesh Independence Study

  14. Good Answer?: • Check the results: • High velocities • High/Low temperatures • Large pressure differences • Hand calc – x people @ 90W each gives a temperature rise of… Refine the mesh in the area where there is a problem

  15. Good Answer?: Grid dependant: If a mesh/grid has non regular shapes, i.e. quite long and thin volumes, or is too coarse around areas of interest it is possible that the answer is dependant upon the ‘poorness’ of the mesh. For example, in the case of a jet being directed at a floor standing obstacle, an area of recirculation may well develop behind the obstacle but obviously this will not be revealed if the grid is too coarse in that region. The way to check that any mesh does not have this effect is checks before the runs start (Cell Aspect Ratio) and also a grid independence study. To do this the density of the mesh is increased globally i.e. add 20% more mesh. Re-run the simulation and check the output is similar to the previous solution. Practically there may not be the time!

  16. Questions: What’s k-ε / constant viscosity method and when would I use one or the other? What’s Upwind, Hybrid, and Power Law and when would I use one or the other? What is the Maximum Cell Aspect Ratio all about then? What’s the inner iterations/false time step and when should I change it? What’s relaxation and when should I change it? Termination residuals – what’s that?

  17. Questions: What’s k-ε / constant viscosity method and when would I use one or the other? k-ε (k epsilon) is a turbulence model that focuses upon the mechanisms that effect turbulent kinetic energy: the production and dissipation (destruction) of kinetic energy caused by turbulence. Calculates the turbulent viscosity. (Actually has no physical manifestation). Only applicable for fully turbulent flows Constant viscosity method – assumes that the viscosity is constant throughout the model

  18. Questions: Turbulence? – fluid flows are categorised into three types of flow: Laminar – adjacent layers of fluid slide easily over each other Transitional – partially turbulent Fully Turbulent – random and chaotic flows Turbulent flows are used in processes to increase mixing i.e. addition of a dye to a fluid.

  19. Types of flow:

  20. Questions: RANS – k-ε model only fully applicable to fully turbulent flow. So what happens near walls? There are three main methods of dealing with the near-wall region: Wall functions – the conventional k-ε model is used throughout the fully turbulent domain but the flux of momentum and heat in the near-wall region is obtained from wall functions which are derived using the logarithmic law of the wall. Wall functions for the momentum equations have been found to provide good predictions although there is some documented evidence to suggest that in some cases the conventional energy equation wall functions can under-predict rates of heat transfer. Low Reynolds-number (low-Re) form of the k-ε model – the conventional k-ε model equations are modified to incorporate damping terms in an attempt to ensure that viscous effects dominate in the near-wall region. The approach has been used with some documented success but requires a fine grid in the near-wall region. Two-layer model - the conventional k-ε model is used throughout the fully turbulent domain but an alternative one equation length-scale model is adopted for the near-wall region. There is some documented evidence that the two-layer approach is found to improve the prediction of flow separation and related suction pressure prediction when used in bluff body applications (such as wind flow over buildings) when compared with the standard k-ε approach.

  21. Questions: Other turbulence models? LES – Large eddy simulation. There is documented evidence that the k-ε model can fail to accurately predict flow separation and reattachment in impingement flow conditions over bluff bodies. Specifically, turbulent intensity and suction pressure conditions over right-angled surfaces causing flow separation are not well accounted for. This failing applies to problems involving wind flow around buildings These failings have prompted interest in a new approach to turbulence modelling based on segregating the treatment of the turbulent flow into large scale and sub-grid scale. These techniques generally fall into a category of turbulence modelling called large eddy simulation (LES). Although this method has exhibited some promise in dealing with wind flow around buildings, it is computationally much more expensive than the k-ε model and there is very little documented work available on the application of LES to internal building flow problems.

  22. Questions : What’s Upwind, Hybrid, and Power Law and when would I use one or the other? These are types of discretisation or “how do I decide during the iterations how much mass etc goes from A to B or B to A” This depends on how much mass etc is at A and B (influence) and how the mass will move i.e. whether there is convection (flow direction) or diffusion. C B A Value at C Value at A Value at B

  23. Questions : What’s Upwind, Hybrid, and Power Law and when would I use one or the other? Convection – paint brush under tap Diffusion – tea bag in water

  24. Questions : What’s Upwind, Hybrid, and Power Law and when would I use one or the other? Effect of A Effect of C B could be calculated by saying: B = Effect of A + Effect of C 2 (Central differencing) B

  25. Questions : What’s Upwind, Hybrid, and Power Law and when would I use one or the other? Effect of A Effect of C If the direction is defined by convection: B = Effect of A This is the effect of the Upwind Method. Means that solutions may be achieved faster B

  26. Questions : What’s Upwind, Hybrid, and Power Law and when would I use one or the other? Hybrid looks at the relative ratio of convection and diffusion (Pe) and chooses an appropriate method – Upwind or Central differencing. Power Law looks around at more volume before and after the volume currently being assessed and apportions the influence of each using a power law relationship. Both Hybrid and Power Law resort to Upwind methods when convection dominates. Where diffusion dominates the Hybrid approach linearises the exact equations, Power Law attempts to reproduce them.

  27. Questions : What is the Maximum Cell Aspect Ratio all about then? Well we all know it is a check of the quality of the mesh – but what does it mean and what simple things can we do to improve it, without adding too many more grid points, when the checker throws up an error? In any one of the three different directions, aspect ratio is computed by dividing the cell face area by the height squared. The value of the measure is always greater than one. Width Height

  28. Questions : What is the Maximum Cell Aspect Ratio all about then? So we know that a large value of MCAR is bad – but why? A large MCAR is when the width is much greater than the height. This means long thin volumes. The knock on effect of this is that the effect of a change in one or more of the variables will propagate faster in one direction than the other direction. This could mean for example that the effective ‘throw’ of a window will be over-estimated. Width Height

  29. Questions : What’s relaxation and when should I change it? Relaxation reduces the amount the current value of a solution will be altered by to the next “guessed” value. Remember our x2 - 1 equation: starting point 2, difference between guesses 1 Guess x=2 22 -1 = 3 Too Big Guess x=1 12 -1 = 0

  30. Questions : What’s relaxation and when should I change it? What if we had started from 1.5, difference 1? Guess x=1.5 1.52 -1 =1.25 Too Big Guess x=0.5 0.52 -1 =-0.75 Too Small Guess x=1.5 1.52 -1 =1.25 Too Big Here we would be oscillating around the answer – the relaxation factor alters the step change between guesses. i.e. an obvious relaxation here would be 0.5 New Difference between guesses = (Relaxation Factor)*(Original Difference) = 0.5 * 1 Therefore new guess x=1 (1.5-0.5) 12 – 1 = 0

  31. Questions : What’s relaxation and when should I change it? When should you change it? When the residual convergence has flattened but hasn’t yet converged. All relaxation really does is slow down the solution, hence “relaxes” it! If you use relaxation too early it can mean that your solution will take longer to reach the answer. Relaxation factors have only been included to satisfy practitioners who prefer this approach – it’s the ‘text book’ approach to procuring convergence. It’s really better to leave the relaxation factors set at unity, i.e. don’t touch them. The equation sets within MicroFlo are set up in time dependent form. The temporal term has the same effect as an inertial relaxation. The false time steps are analogous to conventional time steps, they may be increased or decreased to speed up or slow down convergence. In both cases, it’s the momentum equations that benefit most from relaxation because of the inter-linked velocity dependent coefficients. In the case of a stubborn solution, it’s usually best to try decreasing the velocity false time steps by consecutive factors of two.

  32. Questions : What’s the inner iterations/false time step and when should I change it? Inner Iterations: number of iterations performed on each variable independently of the main iterations. False time step: the parameter that fixes the difference in values between each iterative guess.

  33. Questions : Termination residuals – what’s that? Simply the point at when you consider that the solution total error is acceptably low – the default is 1 * e-005 The termination residual is the maximum calculated residual.

  34. Rules of Thumb: Keep components in line in x and y and z if at all possible Use power-law mesh spacing to increase density at areas of interest and less so in open areas. Increase mesh in areas where there is likely to be direction changes in the flow Sufficient mesh density in between obstacles Avoidance of high aspect ratio

  35. Rules of Thumb: Supply diffusers provide sufficient mesh density Supply diffusers – model the actual free-area – jetting in centre of large diffuser Check wake behind building

  36. Rules of Thumb: If spaces were already joined by a hole in ModellIT and you didn’t model then the hole is counted as a wall. Remodel this using windows and Macroflo so the flow rates can be established. Go for as regular a grid as possible. If a solution is diverging, reduce the velocity false time steps by a factor of two and try again. The mass residual is perhaps the best indication of convergence. Use the cell monitor to get a better idea of convergence.

  37. Rules of Thumb: Keep walls in line with the axis. Make sure when connecting spaces that they actually join – end points Check inlets/outlets are performing as anticipated early in the solution process to avoid wasting time converging an incorrect solution. If possible align the predominant flow direction along one of the major grid axes. False diffusion is increased with increasingly acute angles of cell attack. Try to ensure that the first grid point from a wall is at least 0.1-0.2m from the wall.

  38. When things go wrong: Problem Residuals continuously increasing Residuals fail to reduce Erratic convergence Mass residual reduces very slowly Residuals all reducing steadily but very slowly Cause False time steps set too high Oscillating flow pattern Unrealistic initial values Internal heat source without sink, e.g. radiator in room with adiabatic surfaces Unstable flows, e.g. strong jets or buoyancy driven plumes Various causes False time step set too low Remedy Reduce false time steps for velocities and possibly temperature Reduce false time steps for velocity Check initial values under Settings Check that the problem is realistic. Set cell monitor points and check for continuously increasing/decreasing values, which would indicate imbalance Reduce false time steps for velocity. Increase number of inner iterations for pressure Increase false time steps

  39. Standard Approach: • Put an initial course mesh ~ 0.1 – 0.2 grid size everywhere • Use constant viscosity method • Run for 10 iterations check the flows and all heat sources • Run for a further 100 iterations check the solution for areas where lots of things are happening and refine mesh if necessary • Change turbulence model to k-ε method • Refine mesh by increasing local mesh density and overall density by ~ 10 -20% • Refine mesh until solution is independent of mesh (given available time) • Use a grid of 3*3*3 cell monitors to check independence • If cell monitors are levelling out and the convergence is flattening use either relaxation or false time steps to speed up convergence

  40. Supply Definition: Supply diffuser angle definition: angle from a perpendicular line to the diffuser i.e. 0° straight down, 85° along the ceiling (coander effect) along either the x or the y direction 85° 0°

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