Wall Porosity
The wall porosity model lets you define phase-specific porous boundaries within a VOF Multiphase simulation. That is, it permits material that belongs to single-component phases to pass through selected wall boundaries.
A typical example for application of the wall porosity model is an investment casting or sand casting simulation. For these types of applications, liquid melt is injected into the domain that is initially filled with air. While the liquid melt is injected producing high pressures, air leaves the domain through the porous mold. When the melt solidifies, shrinkage of the solidified melt can produce low pressures in the domain. These low pressures can lead to air being sucked back into the domain. In Simcenter STAR-CCM+, you model this behavior using the wall porosity model, which allows the selected phase, typically a gas phase, to leave and to enter the domain based on pressure distribution. For each phase, you can control whether it leaves through a particular boundary or not.
- if the mold is modeled as a solid region (and not as a porous fluid region).
- if the flow through the porous boundary can be considered a creeping flow.
For fluid entering the domain, turbulent kinetic energy and turbulent dissipation rate are not taken into account. Also, the fluid enters the domain at the temperature of the phase at the boundary.
The velocity across the porous boundary is calculated from the known pressure drop across it.