3D Design

3D Design

Implementing bottom topography into model

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      Hello,


      We are hoping to implement bottom topography in a model we currently run.


      We were planning to do so by importing a file to the geometry (either space claim or design modeler), if possible.


      We were planning to use ArcGIS to map the bottom topography.


      Is there a proper way to export the file/data from ArcGIS to import into the fluent geometry?


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      SpaceClaim will read a lot of formats, so that's probably the best route.  I've not used ArcGIS but would expect it to export stl? 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      Thank you. It appears that ArcGIS exports to either VRML or DEM. Are either of these compatible? Otherwise I can look into transferring file types.


       


      Thanks,
      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      Try the VRML, technically that's an stl with colour assigned to the facets. 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      Hello,


       


      I imported an STL file into SpaceClaim and it came out as a solid line (see attached image). I'm not sure why this occurred and would appreciate any suggestions. 


       



      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Keyur Kanade
      Ansys Employee

      Can you please try VRML (*.wrl). 


      Regards,


      Keyur


       


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    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      I will try that. Right now I am using ArcGIS and they don't have the option to export as VRML so I will try to find a way to transfer to that file type and then let you know if it worked!


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      The object is a solid: can you check that you don't have a rogue point that's some distance from the rest of the data.

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      I tried exporting to VRML but it exported to .x3dv rather than .wrl. I noticed that ANSYS 19.2 does not accept this file type. Does the new versions of ANSYS? I am working to convert it to .wrl but struggling currently. 


       


      I will check that there is no rogue point in the .stl file.


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      I've not seen that format before, maybe Ensight can read it? 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      I will give it a try! I looked it up and it seems its an updated type of VRML file. 


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      Hello,


      I have tried importing a few different files into SpaceClaim and they import fine, but are a flat faceted body, I was wondering if this may have to do with the GPS coordinate system that is used. Is there a specific one I should use when exporting my geometry files?


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      Hello,


      It was suggested that I try using ICEM for this task I am trying to complete, is this a useful suggestion? I am planning to take an ICEM course in order to learn the program, but if it will not work I will not waste my time. 


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      Check how the data is formatted, do they explicitly have an "up" coordinate? Some of the NASA/GIS data can be in odd units too. 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      When I look at the STL file, there is a column (ranging from -4 to -20 or so) that is indicative of the height. I'm not sure how to check the STL file or DWG file for 'up' other than that. 


      I checked the data that I used for all of the coordinates and this is what information I could find... is there a better coordinate system or such to use when exporting? 


       



      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      I wonder if it's CAD accuracy then: you're trying to pick up fractions of a mm in dimensions of around 200km. Can you scale the points to something more sensible (ie move to the origin)? 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      Hello,


       


      I have been in discussion with someone from ArcGIS and they are asking exactly how ANSYS SpaceClaim uses the drawing file for depths/elevation, so that he can get a better understanding of how to export the file from GIS properly to fit the needs of the modeling program. 


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      Hello,


       


      I have tried using a different program (QGIS) to convert into STL and when I load into SpaceClaim I am still getting a flat topography. I tried exaggerating the z direction by a factor of 5, and it is still completely flat. 


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      SpaceClaim will read the stl as exported so it's got to be a problem from that side. If you read the stl into another CAD tool or Fluent Meshing how does it look?

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      Hello,


      I have finally imported the STL into space claim. I transferred it from a faceted body to a solid. I am now trying to create a box above the uneven surface, but connected to it, that I will have fluid flow through. I am not familiar with space claim and usually use design modeler. What is the easiest way to do this? I attached a screenshot if it is helpful.


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      I was able to add a box that overlaps the bottom piece from the STL. I then tried to use the merge tool to cut the box to the shape of the bottom piece, but got the error that the two cannot be merged. Is there a better way to do this? 


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      I'd create a box that's slightly smaller than the face (and to the height you want) then slice the box. As it's an stl import you may need the Faceted menu. 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      So slice the box using the faceted body? I tried doing other operations with the bottom piece as a faceted body and it said I needed it as a solid to complete the operations. 

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      Yes, make the box so the faceted face splits it in two. 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      I will try this. 


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      I was able to cut the solid with the faceted body (I first turned the box to a faceted body, cut it, then turned both back to solids. I am now trying to get the bottom (slightly larger) piece to match up with the box I cut. When I try to pull the face the program freezes for many hours (count right now is 12 hours) and doesn't complete. Is there a better way to do this? I'm using a very small model (100 mm) and on a 54 processor computer, so I don't know why it is not able to process the movement. 


       



       


      Thanks,
      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      The core count doesn't matter, it's RAM that tends to be the bottle neck. How many facets are there? Equally it's an operation that should take minutes at most. 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      The computer has 528 GB of RAM. I'm not sure how to check how many facets, but there is a large amount. When I convert to solids to pull the face, there are quite a few faces on the part of the geometry that is complex topography. 


       


      Thanks,
      Alex

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      So I actually was able to accomplish this by splitting the bottom body using the plane from the face of the top body on each side. I'm still not sure why the program froze and could not handle the face pulls. 


      Last question: How important is sharing topography? I have these two separate boxes. One will be the sediment/bottom of the ocean, and the other will be water with a flow from an inlet/outlet. 


      Thanks, 


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      What mechanism do you intend to use to move the sediment? 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      We have not decided on if we are planning to implement or move sediment within the model. It is more to study magnetics using realistic bottom topography. I do have another issue though. I am trying to mesh this domain and every method I use has errors. I tried meshing alone, then doing the fluent/meshing coupled watertight geometry and fault tolerant meshing in 2020R1. The most recent error was: Error: state/object/execute-command:Exception encountered in S_InitializeWorkflow


      Error Object: ()


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

    • Rob
      Ansys Employee

      If you don't need the "solid" part won't you just have one volume? If so delete/suppress for physics that volume.  Is the fluid region a volume in SpaceClaim? 

    • soloviev
      Subscriber

      So suppress the solid part for physics. Yes, the fluid region is a solid volume.


       


      Thanks,


      Alex

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