Circumferential Heat Flux Averaging Workflow

You can use Circumferential Heat Flux Averaging for any Physics node in the simulation tree, if the conditions for the model apply.

There are two methods, both based on the Circumferential Flux Averaging model:
External Boundary
Use this method in the case of a solid or fluid body spinning rapidly in a region without mesh, with no medium between the body and its environment, represented by the boundary of the region beyond the meshless one.
Interface
Use this method in the case of a solid body spinning rapidly in an interfacing fluid medium. You must activate the Circumferential Flux Averaging model for both sides of the interface, that is, for both the solid and fluid continua.

Use the following steps:

  1. Select any energy model, but do not select any of these incompatible models:
    • Eulerian models
    • Harmonic Balance models
    • The Fluid Film model
    • The PISO Unsteady model
  2. Select the Circumferential Flux Averaging model from the Optional Models group box.
    The model has no user-defined properties.
  3. Set up a rotating reference frame for the spinning region.
  4. Set Physics Conditions:
    • For the External Boundary case, open the Regions > Physics Conditions node for the rotating region.
    • For the Interface case, open the Interface > Physics Conditions node for the interface being averaged.
  5. Open the Physics Values node for the boundary.
  6. Select Axial Strip Specification Method and, in the Properties window, enter a value for the Number of Axial Strips.
  7. If you are using an unsteady time mode, set the time-step to be at least as long as one complete rotation of the rotating frame. Accuracy improves as the number of rotations per time-step increases. If the time-step is too short, an error message appears on the console.

Run the simulation.