SOLIDWORKS Flow Simulation - Thermal Radiation

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • See more at: www.goengineer....
    Learn about the thermal radiation capabilities in SOLIDWORKS Flow Simulation.
    This webinar covers the following topics:
    • Basic setup parameters required for Radiation analysis
    • Meshing strategies to improve results
    • Solved Analytical Example to compare results from Flow Simulation
    Link to MIT Article on Radiation:
    web.mit.edu/16...
    Link to MIT Article with the Thermos problem:
    web.mit.edu/16...
    About GoEngineer: GoEngineer delivers software, technology and expertise that enable companies to unlock innovation and deliver better products faster. With more than 30 years experience and thousands of customers in high-tech, medical, machine design, energy and other industries, GoEngineer provides best-in-class design solutions from SOLIDWORKS, Stratasys, CAMWorks and Agile PLM.
    www.goengineer.com
    / goengineer
    / goengineer
    / goengineer
    plus.google.co...

Комментарии • 10

  • @gokiburi-chan4255
    @gokiburi-chan4255 3 года назад +1

    You can hear the fan trying to lift of when he creates the mesh LMAO

  • @seeandgrow
    @seeandgrow Год назад +2

    Hi @GoEngineer nice explanation, I have doubt, how to apply Lambertian radiation?

    • @goengineer
      @goengineer  Год назад +1

      This is what solidworks has t osay on the issues
      The SOLIDWORKS® Flow Simulation software assumes that the heat radiation from the solid surfaces, both the emitted and reflected, is diffuse (except for the symmetry radiative surface type). This obeys the Lambert law, according to which the radiation intensity per unit area and per unit solid angle is the same in all directions. The solar radiation is absorbed and reflected by surfaces independently from thermal radiation from all other heat radiation sources. The propagating heat radiation passes through a solid specified as radiation transparent without any refraction or absorption. You can specify a solid as transparent to the solar radiation only, or transparent to the thermal radiation from all sources except the solar radiation, or transparent to both types of radiation, thermal and solar. The project fluids neither emit nor absorb heat radiation (they are transparent to the heat radiation), so the heat radiation concerns solid surfaces only. The radiative solid surfaces that are not specified as a blackbody or whitebody are assumed an ideal graybody, that is, having a continuous emissive power spectrum similar to that of blackbody, so their monochromatic emissivity is independent of the emission wavelength. For certain materials with certain surface conditions, the graybody emissivity can depend on the surface temperature.

    • @seeandgrow
      @seeandgrow Год назад

      @@goengineer Thank you! I think ANSYS also follows the same Lambertian heat distribution as SolidWorks right?

  • @shivateja3578
    @shivateja3578 5 лет назад +1

    hii , could u tell me dimensions of screen ,sphere and how did u designed sphere with reflector ?

  • @AndreeewP
    @AndreeewP Год назад +1

    Awesome video, thanks for the help. Your accent is hard to put a finger on. Where are you from?

  • @TheLouis1991
    @TheLouis1991 3 года назад +2

    Hi,
    Flow Simulation is doing the View Factor calculation. DO you know, where to look up this parameter for the whole model?
    thankyou

    • @goengineer
      @goengineer  3 года назад

      There isn’t a way to look up the view factor from the analysis as Flow Simulation uses a ray model for radiation but there is a forum article that talks about how you can extract this value : forum.solidworks.com/thread/245723 . Thank you.

    • @TheLouis1991
      @TheLouis1991 3 года назад

      @@goengineer Hi thankyou for the hint! Thats me asking in that forum :)

  • @franciswaynemojana5909
    @franciswaynemojana5909 5 лет назад

    Hello, why you didn't put the heat source on the first study you made>