Title: PHOENICS Developments Work in progress
1PHOENICS DevelopmentsWork in progress
- Main activities are
- Assisting the new user
- Revealing buried treasures
- Meeting the needs of end-users in
special-application sectors - Building on existing strengths
- Providing new features
21. Assisting the new userthe Commander, 1
- -- The PHOENICS-Commander top page has a
'new-user' button - -- clicking on it leads to welcome, a quick
start, a slower start, tutorials, and
ready-to-run cases. - -- But not enough cases have been selected,
polished and provided with new-user-suitable
words. - -- and tutorials need updates and augmentation.
31. Assisting the new userThe Commander, 2
- The Commander has multi-language structure.
- Each language has its own dictionary and its own
help file. - BUT only the English and Russian are available.
- Who will provide the other-language equivalents?
- It is quite easy for a native speaker. I shall be
glad to explain what is necessary.
42 Revealing buried treasures1 In-Form
- In-Form is an immensely valuable feature of
PHOENICS. - More documentation and exemplification exist for
it than for any other feature. - No competitor has anything so powerful. (Or so I
think. Am I right?) - BUT it has still not caught on.
- Why not? Advice will be welcome.
52 Revealing buried treasures2. PARSOL
- This cut-cell technique is recognised by most
users as economical of users time and effort. - BUT some are persuaded (by competitors ?) that
body-fitting grids are inherently more accurate. - We need benchmark comparisons.
- Has anyone made some which they could/would
contribute?
62 Revealing buried treasures3. MUSES
- Multiply SharEd Space is a valuable technique,
providing multi-phase capability. - It was introduced into PHOENICS (uniquely, I
believe) several years ago but it became buried. - It has been used (only) for heat exchangers and
blast furnaces . - Because it employed PLANT statements recovery
involved conversion to In-Form. - Carrying out this conversion has opened the door
to NewMuses (discussed below)
73 Meeting the needs of end users1
Special-purpose programs
- CHAM has only one well-maintained SPP, namely
FLAIR, - However, CVD (for chemical-vapour- deposition
reactors) and ESTER (for aluminium smelters) have
had face-lifts. - The overheads in creating and maintaining an SPP
are not small. So there will probably be no more.
- Nevertheless most potential users of PHOENICS are
interested in only narrow application sectors. - We therefore need a new strategy.
83 Meeting the needs of end users2
Special-purpose GATEWAYS
- The new strategy the GATEWAY concept, namely
- 1 The PHOENICS package (pre-processors, solver,
post-processors documentation) is always the
same. - 2. For each sector, there is provided a bundle of
files which, accessed via PRELUDE, provide all
that the end-user needs but no more. - 3.The bundle includes
- A store cupboard filled with useful
objects-with-attributes - A start-up script
- A few examples
- A new-user tutorial.
- 4. We do not plan to de-activate any parts of
PHOENICS so a Gateway user still has access to
all PHOENICS facilities. - 5. Probably a modest extra charge will be made
for the files.
93 Meeting the needs of end users2 GATEWAYS
(continued)
- GATEWAYS are much easier to construct and
maintain than SPPs. - They are best constructed by partnerships between
CHAM and a specialist company or consultant. - Examples of application sectors which could be
served by PHOENICS GATEWAYS include
103 Meeting the needs of end users2 GATEWAYS
(continued)
- Shell-and-tube and other heat exchangers
- Steam condensers
- Furnaces and incinerators
- City pollution complete-building studies via
transfer objects - Circuit-breakers
- Rocket-exhaust plumes
- Fans, pumps, compressors of various kinds
- Wind farms
- Wave tanks
- Waste-water treatment plant
- and many more.
- Would you like to be a gateway partner? Please
let me know. - You will learn more about gateways in the last
part of this lecture.
114. Building on existing strengths1. Multi-phase
flow
- CHAM pioneered the CFD simulation of two-phase
flow, funded by the nuclear industry in the USA
and UK. - The input file library contains many examples.
- Competing CFD codes are weaker than PHOENICS in
this application area but they will catch up. - The (buried) MUSES technique was our first step
towards multi-phase-flow simulation. - The current In-Formization project has revealed
- 1 (bad) that its PLANT embodiment was not quite
correctly implemented and - 2 (good) when it is correctly implemented it
allows many more new applications, and
improvements to pre-existing features
(e.g.MOFOR), than had been previously recognized. - Exploitation of this new recognition is one of
the tasks being worked on in Moscow.
124. Building on existing strengths2. Simultaneous
flow solid stress
- Another unique buried-treasure strength of
PHOENICS is its SFT capability. - Its early implementation had deficiencies, now
removed. - However exemplification, and problem set-up
assistance via VR-Editor or (more probably
PRELUDE) must be supplied if its value is to be
recognized by users. - Do any of you have active projects needing
simultaneous solid-stress computation? If so,
CHAM will be glad to assist. - Joint consultancy projects would be the best way.
- This is another of the tasks being worked on in
Moscow.
134. Building on existing strengths3. PARSOL
- PARSOL has a weakness, which its name betrays
- PARt SOLid reveals that its authors thought of
cells as having one part fluid and the other
solid. - Then, thinking solids had no need for the
pressure or velocity variables, they constructed
unsymmetrical coding. - Since then, we have recognised the need to handle
cut cells in which both parts are fluid - Or more generally these which may be divided into
three, typically (but not necessarily) two fluid
parts and one solid.
144. Building on existing strengths3. PARSOL
(continued)
- The current NewParsol project is therefore
directed to enabling PHOENICS to handle
doubly-cut (and therefore 3-part) cells. - During its course, the possibility of using Local
Body-Fitted-Coordinate grids was explored, and
found to be satisfactory for some cases. - However, human-resource limitations have caused
it to be put on hold. - Nevertheless, the diversion allowed time and
provided stimulus for the invention of a neater
NewParsol strategy than was first conceived. - This is now being investigated. Its
implementation will involve both Moscow and
Wimbledon. - A difficulty to be overcome is the
Henry-King-ism of some the legacy coding.
However a cure for this disease is being
administered. - The new strategy allows for the stresses to be
computed in the solids, as well as heat fluxes
both along and normal to the.interfaces.
155 Providing new featuresUSP 1 the motive
- The only radically new feature being worked on
(mainly in Moscow) is UnStructured Phoenics,
known as USP. - The motive is NOT (as it may be for competitors)
to handle curved-surface bodies for PARSOL
handles these satisfactorily. - The motive is to cut out the waste of time and
storage entailed by the un-needed fine-grid
regions which PARSOL (in a structured grid)
generates far from the bodies. - I will also cut out waste when only a small part
of the domain is physically interesting as in the
next picture..
16USP ignores most cells
175 Providing new featuresUSP 2 the method
- USP is a part of the standard PHOENICS package,
which remains able to work in structured or in
USP mode. - USP employs a standard-PHOENICS cartesian or
polar grid as its starting point. - It proceeds by replacing pairs, quartets or
octets of cells by single cells, until the
required economical grid is arrived at. - It retains PARSOLs sub-cells near curved-surface
objects. - USP employs a collocated scheme for the pressure
and velocities.
185 Providing new featuresUSP 2 the method
(continued)
- Most of the new coding is being written in
Fortran 90. - New features are tested as they are introduced,
where possible by comparison of results with
those of structured PHOENICS. - Activation of USP requires few actions by the
user except settings of grid coarsening factors. - The main work is being performed in Moscow but
testing has begun in Wimbledon.
195 Providing new featuresUSP 3. Current status
- All the main elements of USP (unstructured
storage, addressing scheme, coefficient and
residual calculation, conjugate-gradient solver)
exist and work satisfactorily) - Boundary-condition and source specifications via
standard Q1s are accepted. - Tests are proceeding systematically and
successfully.
205 Providing new featuresUSP 4. Main outstanding
matters
- Acceptance of In-Form input.
- Decisions about grid-file format.
- Decisions about automatic grid generation.
- Decisions about visual display of result.
- The date for beta release (hopefully June 2007).
21Phoenics developments