ACU-T: 3202 Heat Transfer Between Concentric Spheres – P1 Radiation Model
Prerequisites
This tutorial provides the instructions for setting up, solving, and viewing results for a steady state simulation of radiation heat transfer between concentric spheres using the P-1 Radiation model. Prior to starting this tutorial, you should have already run through the introductory tutorial, ACU-T: 1000 UI Introduction, and have a basic understanding of HyperMesh CFD and AcuSolve. To run this simulation, you will need access to a licensed version of HyperMesh CFD and AcuSolve.
Problem Description
The problem to be addressed in this tutorial is shown schematically in Figure 1. In this problem, a P1 radiation model is used to simulate the heat transfer due to radiation between concentric spheres. The inside surface of the inner and the outside surface of the outer sphere are both held at constant temperature while the gap between them radiates the heat from one sphere to the other.
The problem consists of a fluid region with arbitrary material properties between two concentric spheres with surfaces held at fixed temperature, as shown in the following figure, which is not drawn to scale. The radius of the outer sphere is 0.04 m and the radius of the inner sphere is 0.01 m. The inner surface of the inner sphere is defined to have a constant wall temperature at 300.0 K (26.85 ºC). The outer surface of the outer sphere is defined to have a constant wall temperature at 1300.0 K (1026.85 ºC). The fluid within the spheres is defined as a non-conducting material, allowing heat to transfer via radiation only.
The problem is solved as a steady state case to allow the heat transfer in the solid and fluid regions to reach an equilibrium.
Start HyperMesh CFD and Open the HyperMesh Database
- Start HyperMesh CFD from the Windows Start menu by clicking .
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From the Home tools, Files tool group, click the Open Model tool.
The Open File dialog opens.
- Browse to the directory where you saved the model file. Select the HyperMesh file ACU-T3202_P1Rad.hm and click Open.
- Click .
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Create a new directory named P1_radiation and navigate into this directory.
This will be the working directory and all the files related to the simulation will be stored in this location.
- Enter P1_radiation as the file name for the database, or choose any name of your preference.
- Click Save to create the database.
Validate the Geometry
The Validate tool scans through the entire model, performs checks on the surfaces and solids, and flags any defects in the geometry, such as free edges, closed shells, intersections, duplicates, and slivers.
Set Up Flow
Set Up the Simulation Parameters and Solver Settings
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From the Flow ribbon, click the Physics tool.
The Setup dialog opens.
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Under the Physics models setting:
- Set Time marching to Steady.
- Set the Turbulence model to Laminar.
- Activate the Heat transfer checkbox.
- Click the Solver controls setting.
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Deactivate the Flow checkbox.
In this tutorial, you will only be solving for the temperature field.
- Close the dialog and save the model.
Create Material Models
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From the Flow ribbon, click the Material Library tool.
The Material Library dialog opens.
- Under Settings, click Fluid then click the My Materials tab.
- Click to create a new material.
- In the new dialog, rename the material to Radiating by clicking the name in the top-left corner.
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Enter the following values for each of the material property tabs then close
the dialog.
- Density – 1000 kg/m3
- Specific Heat – 10000 J/kg-K
- Viscosity – 1e-5 kg/m-sec
- Conductivity – 1e-6 W/m-K
Figure 8.
- Click the Solid setting.
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Repeat the above steps to create two material models
(Inner and Outer) using the
following parameters:
- Inner
-
- Density – 1000 kg/m3
- Specific Heat – 10000 J/kg-K
- Conductivity – 2 W/m-K
- Outer
-
- Density – 1000 kg/m3
- Specific Heat – 10000 J/kg-K
- Conductivity – 0.35 W/m-K
Assign Material Properties
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From the Flow ribbon, click the Material tool.
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Select the outer solid and assign the Outer material
model from the microdialog.
- On the guide bar, click to execute the command and remain in the tool.
- In the Materials legend, right-click on Air and select Isolate.
- Select the outer solid and assign the Radiating material model to it.
- On the guide bar, click .
- In the Materials legend, right-click on Air again and select Isolate.
- Select the remaining solid and assign the Inner material model to it.
- On the guide bar, click to execute the command and exit the tool.
- Save the model.
Assign the Flow Boundary Conditions
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From the Flow ribbon, click the No Slip tool.
- Select the two faces of the sphere then right-click and select Hide.
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Select the two faces remaining in the modeling window.
In the microdialog, assign a
Temperature boundary condition at
300 K.
- In the Boundaries legend, double-click on Wall and rename it to Inner.
- On the guide bar, click to execute the command and remain in the tool.
- Press the A key to turn on the display of all surfaces.
- Select the two outer faces. In the microdialog, assign a Temperature boundary condition at 1300 K.
- In the Boundaries legend, double-click on Wall and rename it to Outer.
- On the guide bar, click to execute the command and exit the tool.
- Save the model.
Set Up Radiation
Select the Radiation Model
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From the Radiation ribbon, Thermal Radiation tools, click the Physics tool.
The Radiation Settings dialog opens.
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Activate the Thermal radiation checkbox and set the
Radiation model to P1 Model.
Define the Radiation Material Properties
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Click the Surface Finish Library tool.
The Surface finish library opens.
- Click .
- In the table, double-click on Surface Finish, rename it to Inner, and the Emissivity to 0.5.
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Similarly, create another Emissivity model named Outer
with an Emissivity of 0.8.
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From the Participating Media tools, click the
Model tool.
The Participating media model library opens.
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Click and create a model with the following properties.
Assign the Participating Media Model
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From the Participating Media tools, click the
Assign tool.
- In the modeling window, right-click and select
- In the microdialog, verify that the Air model is selected.
- Click on the guide bar.
- In the Participating Media legend, right-click on Air and select Isolate.
Assign the Emissivity Model
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From the Thermal Radiation tools, click the
Surface Finish
tool.
- Select the two outer surfaces.
- In the microdialog, select the Outer surface finish model.
- Click on the guide bar.
- In the Participating Media legend, right-click on Black Body and select Isolate.
- Select the two visible surfaces and assign the Inner surface finish model.
- Click on the guide bar.
- Save the model.
Generate the Mesh
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From the Mesh ribbon, click the
Volume tool.
The Meshing Operations dialog opens.Note: If the model has not been validated, you are prompted to create the simulation model before running the batch mesh.
- Check that the Average element size is 0.0025 and the Mesh growth rate is 1.0.
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Accept all other default parameters.
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Click Mesh.
The Run Status dialog opens. Once the run is complete, the status is updated and you can close the dialog.Tip: Right-click on the mesh job and select View log file to view a summary of the meshing process.
Run AcuSolve
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From the Solution ribbon, click the Run tool.
- Set the Parallel processing option to Intel MPI.
- Optional: Set the number of processors to 4 or 8 based on availability.
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Leave the remaining options as default and click
Run to launch AcuSolve.
Post-Process the Results with HM-CFD Post
- Once the solution is completed, navigate to the Post ribbon.
- From the menu bar, click .
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Select the AcuSolve log file in your problem
directory to load the results for post-processing.
The solid and all the surfaces are loaded in the Post Browser.
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In the browser, click the icon beside Flow Boundaries to turn off the display
of all the surfaces.
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Click the Slice Planes tool.
- Select the x-y plane in the modeling window.
- In the slice plane microdialog, click to create the slice plane.
- In the display properties microdialog, set the display to Temperature and activate the Legend toggle.
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Click and set the Colormap Name to Rainbow
Uniform.
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Click on the guide bar then press F
to fit the section cut to the screen.
Summary
In this tutorial, you learned how to set up and solve a radiation heat transfer simulation using the P1 radiation model. You started by importing the HyperMesh CFD input database and defining the flow and radiation setup. Then, you generated the mesh and submitted the AcuSolve simulation. Once the solution was computed, created a contour plot of temperature distribution on a section cut using HyperMesh CFD Post.