Creating a Two-Dimensional Mesh

Follow these instructions to produce a real two-dimensional mesh in Simcenter STAR-CCM+ from selected two-dimensional part surfaces.

Creating a 2D mesh is more efficient and less computationally expensive than extracting a 2D mesh from a 3D mesh. 2D meshes are useful for some electric machine and aerospace industry analyses.
Before creating a 2D mesh:
  1. The whole part surface on which a 2D mesh is required must be coincident with the Z=0 plane, within a tolerance of 1.0e-6. If necessary, transform the parent part so that the target part surface lies on the Z=0 plane. You can also use splitting tools to break out the target surface into its own part surface. See Manipulating Part Surfaces.
    NoteFor 2D axisymmetric analyses, the axis must lie on the X-axis and the mesh must also be above the local Y=0 plane. If necessary, transform the parts. See Transforming Parts to a Coordinate System.
To create a 2D mesh:
  1. Badge the 2D parts that contain the Z=0 surfaces.
  2. Assign parts to 2D regions. See Assigning Parts to Two-Dimensional Regions.
    Separate regions are created for 2D and 3D parts.
    NoteParts that are badged as 2D cannot belong to the same region as parts that are not badged.
  3. Create an Automated Mesh (2D) operation. See Creating the Two-Dimensional Automated Mesh Operation.
Using a custom surface control, you can generate a mixed mesh (that is, a mesh that has surfaces with different elements).
  1. To create a mixed mesh:
    1. Create a custom surface control and add to it the surfaces on which you want to have different element types. See Surface Controls.
      These surfaces must be part of the source surfaces.
    2. Expand the Custom Controls > Surface Control > Controls node.
    3. Select the Dominant Element Type node and choose the desired element type. See Dominant Element Type.
  2. Generate the volume mesh.
    The 2D mesh is generated only on the Z=0 surfaces that you identify using the Badge For 2D Meshing operation.