-
-
July 12, 2023 at 5:36 pm
peppers
SubscriberI have a geometry where there is a chamber that has an inlet and an outlet. how to know if the chamber is vacuum or not before the airflow enters through the inlet? where in ansys 2023 to find out and set it up?
thank you -
July 13, 2023 at 6:15 am
SRP
Ansys EmployeeHi,
You need to first set the boundary condition correctly,initialize the solution by specifying initial conditions. Once the simulation is complete, you can analyze the results to determine if the chamber is a vacuum or not. Look at the pressure distribution inside the chamber. If the pressure remains close to zero or significantly lower than atmospheric pressure throughout the chamber, it indicates a vacuum condition.
Thank you.
-
July 13, 2023 at 7:41 am
peppers
SubscriberSorry I do not exactly understand. doesn't seeing after the simulation mean seeing when the airflow has entered through the inlet? while what I'm looking for is before the airflow enters the inlet so is there a vacuum in the room or not
-
-
July 13, 2023 at 8:12 am
Rob
Ansys EmployeeI'd be surprised if a room was at vacuum pressure. What would you like there to be in the room when you start the calculation?
-
July 13, 2023 at 8:17 am
peppers
Subscriberbefore starting the calculation what I want is that the room is not a vacuum. however I don't know a way to find out and define it in ansys
-
-
July 13, 2023 at 8:59 am
SRP
Ansys EmployeeHi,
When you import CAD/Mesh in fluent, it is just a solid model nothing is there in fluent. Fluent is a platform where you create a required environment that you want to simulate. Environment is created by specific boundary condition and giving the initial conditions in fluent. Initialization is a command which helps to set the initial condition for your problem.
Hope this clears your doubt.
Thank you.
-
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

Boost Ansys Fluent Simulations with AWS
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) helps engineers design products in which the flow of fluid components is a significant challenge. These different use cases often require large complex models to solve on a traditional workstation. Click here to join this event to learn how to leverage Ansys Fluids on the cloud, thanks to Ansys Gateway powered by AWS.

Earth Rescue – An Ansys Online Series
The climate crisis is here. But so is the human ingenuity to fight it. Earth Rescue reveals what visionary companies are doing today to engineer radical new ideas in the fight against climate change. Click here to watch the first episode.

Ansys Blog
Subscribe to the Ansys Blog to get great new content about the power of simulation delivered right to your email on a weekly basis. With content from Ansys experts, partners and customers you will learn about product development advances, thought leadership and trends and tips to better use Ansys tools. Sign up here.
- Floating point exception in Fluent
- What are the differences between CFX and Fluent?
- Heat transfer coefficient
- Difference between K-epsilon and K-omega Turbulence Model
- Getting graph and tabular data from result in workbench mechanical
- The solver failed with a non-zero exit code of : 2
- Suppress Fluent to open with GUI while performing in journal file
- Mesh Interfaces in ANSYS FLUENT
- Time Step Size and Courant Number
- error: Received signal SIGSEGV
-
7742
-
4502
-
2961
-
1449
-
1322
© 2023 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.