Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Henry Weller
c52e4b58a1 thermophysicalModels: Changed specie thermodynamics from mole to mass basis
The fundamental properties provided by the specie class hierarchy were
mole-based, i.e. provide the properties per mole whereas the fundamental
properties provided by the liquidProperties and solidProperties classes are
mass-based, i.e. per unit mass.  This inconsistency made it impossible to
instantiate the thermodynamics packages (rhoThermo, psiThermo) used by the FV
transport solvers on liquidProperties.  In order to combine VoF with film and/or
Lagrangian models it is essential that the physical propertied of the three
representations of the liquid are consistent which means that it is necessary to
instantiate the thermodynamics packages on liquidProperties.  This requires
either liquidProperties to be rewritten mole-based or the specie classes to be
rewritten mass-based.  Given that most of OpenFOAM solvers operate
mass-based (solve for mass-fractions and provide mass-fractions to sub-models it
is more consistent and efficient if the low-level thermodynamics is also
mass-based.

This commit includes all of the changes necessary for all of the thermodynamics
in OpenFOAM to operate mass-based and supports the instantiation of
thermodynamics packages on liquidProperties.

Note that most users, developers and contributors to OpenFOAM will not notice
any difference in the operation of the code except that the confusing

    nMoles     1;

entries in the thermophysicalProperties files are no longer needed or used and
have been removed in this commet.  The only substantial change to the internals
is that species thermodynamics are now "mixed" with mass rather than mole
fractions.  This is more convenient except for defining reaction equilibrium
thermodynamics for which the molar rather than mass composition is usually know.
The consequence of this can be seen in the adiabaticFlameT, equilibriumCO and
equilibriumFlameT utilities in which the species thermodynamics are
pre-multiplied by their molecular mass to effectively convert them to mole-basis
to simplify the definition of the reaction equilibrium thermodynamics, e.g. in
equilibriumCO

    // Reactants (mole-based)
    thermo FUEL(thermoData.subDict(fuelName)); FUEL *= FUEL.W();

    // Oxidant (mole-based)
    thermo O2(thermoData.subDict("O2")); O2 *= O2.W();
    thermo N2(thermoData.subDict("N2")); N2 *= N2.W();

    // Intermediates (mole-based)
    thermo H2(thermoData.subDict("H2")); H2 *= H2.W();

    // Products (mole-based)
    thermo CO2(thermoData.subDict("CO2")); CO2 *= CO2.W();
    thermo H2O(thermoData.subDict("H2O")); H2O *= H2O.W();
    thermo CO(thermoData.subDict("CO")); CO *= CO.W();

    // Product dissociation reactions

    thermo CO2BreakUp
    (
        CO2 == CO + 0.5*O2
    );

    thermo H2OBreakUp
    (
        H2O == H2 + 0.5*O2
    );

Please report any problems with this substantial but necessary rewrite of the
thermodynamic at https://bugs.openfoam.org

Henry G. Weller
CFD Direct Ltd.
2017-02-17 11:22:14 +00:00
Henry Weller
d98136e122 tutorials: Removed unnecessary "boundary" files 2015-11-13 20:05:37 +00:00
Henry Weller
37cfc3ab46 tutorials: Removed unnecessary spaces between parentheses and values in vectors 2015-07-21 20:55:44 +01:00
Henry Weller
eb53f9bdf0 reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam: New twoPhaseEulerFoam supporting mass-transfer and reactions
Multi-species, mass-transfer and reaction support and multi-phase
structure provided by William Bainbridge.

Integration of the latest p-U and face-p_U algorithms with William's
multi-phase structure is not quite complete due to design
incompatibilities which needs further development.  However the
integration of the functionality is complete.

The results of the tutorials are not exactly the same for the
twoPhaseEulerFoam and reactingTwoPhaseEulerFoam solvers but are very
similar.  Further analysis in needed to ensure these differences are
physical or to resolve them; in the meantime the twoPhaseEulerFoam
solver will be maintained.
2015-06-12 09:52:17 +01:00