Commit Graph

14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Heather
763bf4674d RELEASE: Updated headers to v2306 2023-06-28 16:35:48 +01:00
Andrew Heather
7e61f36c12 RELEASE: Updated headers to v2212 2022-12-21 16:16:18 +00:00
Andrew Heather
7792501a01 RELEASE: Updated headers for v2206 2022-06-24 15:41:02 +01:00
Andrew Heather
a2014242cf RELEASE: Updated headers for v2112 2021-12-20 14:18:01 +00:00
Andrew Heather
e3796745ed CONFIG: Updated headers to v2106
Minor clean-up
2021-06-28 09:14:42 +01:00
Kutalmis Bercin
3a858ac682 TUT: mesh: clean up tutorials 2021-06-08 20:14:09 +00:00
Andrew Heather
79e353b84e RELEASE: Updated version to v2012 2020-12-23 10:01:39 +01:00
Andrew Heather
538d749220 REL: Updated headers to version v2006 2020-06-29 17:27:54 +01:00
Andrew Heather
ae2ab06312 REL: Release preparations 2019-12-23 09:49:23 +00:00
Andrew Heather
be44dcaf1f RELEASE: Version clean-up for release 2019-06-25 11:51:19 +01:00
Andrew Heather
9231534efa STYLE: Updating version to v1812 2018-12-19 18:07:52 +00:00
Andrew Heather
6e35bcda70 ENH: Updated config for release v1806 2018-06-28 12:56:00 +01:00
Andrew Heather
28e37bbec9 STYLE: Consistency updates 2016-12-16 14:36:48 +00:00
Henry Weller
009203188f blockMesh: New experimental support for projecting block face point to geometric surfaces
For example, to mesh a sphere with a single block the geometry is defined in the
blockMeshDict as a searchableSurface:

    geometry
    {
        sphere
        {
            type searchableSphere;
            centre (0 0 0);
            radius 1;
        }
    }

The vertices, block topology and curved edges are defined in the usual
way, for example

    v 0.5773502;
    mv -0.5773502;

    a 0.7071067;
    ma -0.7071067;

    vertices
    (
        ($mv $mv $mv)
        ( $v $mv $mv)
        ( $v  $v $mv)
        ($mv  $v $mv)
        ($mv $mv  $v)
        ( $v $mv  $v)
        ( $v  $v  $v)
        ($mv  $v  $v)
    );

    blocks
    (
        hex (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7) (10 10 10) simpleGrading (1 1 1)
    );

    edges
    (
        arc 0 1 (0 $ma $ma)
        arc 2 3 (0 $a $ma)
        arc 6 7 (0 $a $a)
        arc 4 5 (0 $ma $a)

        arc 0 3 ($ma 0 $ma)
        arc 1 2 ($a 0 $ma)
        arc 5 6 ($a 0 $a)
        arc 4 7 ($ma 0 $a)

        arc 0 4 ($ma $ma 0)
        arc 1 5 ($a $ma 0)
        arc 2 6 ($a $a 0)
        arc 3 7 ($ma $a 0)
    );

which will produce a mesh in which the block edges conform to the sphere
but the faces of the block lie somewhere between the original cube and
the spherical surface which is a consequence of the edge-based
transfinite interpolation.

Now the projection of the block faces to the geometry specified above
can also be specified:

    faces
    (
        project (0 4 7 3) sphere
        project (2 6 5 1) sphere
        project (1 5 4 0) sphere
        project (3 7 6 2) sphere
        project (0 3 2 1) sphere
        project (4 5 6 7) sphere
    );

which produces a mesh that actually conforms to the sphere.

See OpenFOAM-dev/tutorials/mesh/blockMesh/sphere

This functionality is experimental and will undergo further development
and generalization in the future to support more complex surfaces,
feature edge specification and extraction etc.  Please get involved if
you would like to see blockMesh become a more flexible block-structured
mesher.

Henry G. Weller, CFD Direct.
2016-10-13 15:05:24 +01:00