Parcels

For flows involving a comparatively small number of dispersed phases, it is possible to formulate and solve governing equations for every droplet, bubble, or particle. However, if the number of dispersed phases is large, a statistical approach is more practical. In this approach, a smaller number of computational parcels represents the total population of dispersed phases.

Each parcel represents a localized group (cluster) of dispersed phases having the same properties. In effect, parcels are a discretization of the population of dispersed phases in the same way that cells are a discretization of continuous space. As with cells, the number of parcels is not arbitrary; it must be large enough so that the properties of the full population of dispersed phases are represented. This number can be assessed, in the absence of any other measures, by performing calculations with different numbers of parcels and comparing the results.

Visualizing Lagrangian Phase Parcels

It is possible to visualize the parcels of a Lagrangian phase in a scene.



Parcels are available to be visualized in this way provided they have not left the computational domain, which usually means only in unsteady simulations.

As with any other parts in a simulation, you can manage the parcels through the scene, or through an individual displayer as shown in the following screenshot.



Using Lagrangian Phase Parcels

A parcel can also serve as an input part for certain derived parts: a cell surface, section, threshold, or iso surface. When a derived part has parcels that are specified as input parts, parcel fields can be visualized and analyzed on it, and parcel-specific reports can operate on it.

Parcel Interaction with Boundaries

A parcel centroid determines the intersection of a Lagrangian parcel with a boundary face. The parcel centroid is the center of mass of all the dispersed phases within the parcel.



Simcenter STAR-CCM+ does not provide the distribution of the dispersed phases in a parcel.

If you require a higher level of resolution for dispersed phase, use DEM.