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Henry Weller 0b2e584fd4 reactingEulerFoam, twoPhaseEulerFoam: Reinstated interfacial pressure-work
Added the interfacial pressure-work terms according to:

Ishii, M., Hibiki, T.,
Thermo-fluid dynamics of two-phase flow,
ISBN-10: 0-387-28321-8, 2006

While this is the most common approach to handling the interfacial
pressure-work it introduces numerical stability issues in regions of low
phase-fraction and rapid flow deformation.  To alleviate this problem an
optional limiter may be applied to the pressure-work term in either of
the energy forms.  This may specified in the
"thermophysicalProperties.<phase>" file, e.g.

pressureWorkAlphaLimit 1e-3;

which sets the pressure work term to 0 for phase-fractions below 1e-3.

For particularly unstable cases a limit of 1e-2 may be necessary.
2016-11-09 11:14:26 +00:00
applications reactingEulerFoam, twoPhaseEulerFoam: Reinstated interfacial pressure-work 2016-11-09 11:14:26 +00:00
bin foamTags: Rationalized tagging 2016-11-09 11:07:29 +00:00
doc doc/Guides: Updated to OpenFOAM-4.0 2016-08-20 13:29:07 +01:00
etc etc/bashrc: Added support for sourcing etc/bashrc with relative path 2016-11-04 13:12:30 +00:00
src functionObjects::yPlus: Call read() in constructor to set base-class controls 2016-11-06 10:31:07 +00:00
tutorials paraFoam -block: Added support for vertex and block names 2016-11-04 17:29:02 +00:00
wmake wmake/rules/General/transform: added filter for third-party paths 2016-10-09 15:14:19 +01:00
.gitignore tutorials/combustion/fireFoam/les: Added missing ph_rgh.orig files 2016-04-27 16:18:25 +01:00
Allwmake Allwmake: Simplified by removing 'doc' option 2016-07-04 22:28:19 +01:00
COPYING Add licence and README 2014-12-10 15:50:51 +00:00
README.org Updated and simplified the Doxygen documentation 2016-06-20 21:20:28 +01:00

README for OpenFOAM-dev

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About OpenFOAM

OpenFOAM is a free, open source computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software package released by the OpenFOAM Foundation. It has a large user base across most areas of engineering and science, from both commercial and academic organisations. OpenFOAM has an extensive range of features to solve anything from complex fluid flows involving chemical reactions, turbulence and heat transfer, to solid dynamics and electromagnetics.

Copyright

OpenFOAM is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. See the file COPYING in this directory or http://www.gnu.org/licenses/, for a description of the GNU General Public License terms under which you can copy the files.