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Pressure driven flow through a pipe with a Y split
Posted 01.08.2017, 14:52 GMT-4 2 Replies
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Hello,
I am trying to model flow through a pipe that splits into two different outlets. The pipe sections after the split are smaller in diameter than the starting section of pipe and are not equal to each other. The flow in the pipe is driven by fluctuating pressure as a function of time in the input. The model is supposed to describe a section of a larger system, but the outlet flow from the pipe has no pressure, where in the actual system there should still be pressure.
To solve this I have tried to use another pressure function of time for the outlet, but COMSOL fails to solve even though the time-dependent function for inlet pressure worked. I have also tried tried modifying the outlet pressure according to Poiseuille's law as a function of p (pressure variable) and the diameters of each section of tube. What I have found to work, though it is inaccurate, is using a constant pressure for the outlet, using a fraction of p (e.g. outlet = p*.95), or using a constant velocity in the outlet.
Thank you
I am trying to model flow through a pipe that splits into two different outlets. The pipe sections after the split are smaller in diameter than the starting section of pipe and are not equal to each other. The flow in the pipe is driven by fluctuating pressure as a function of time in the input. The model is supposed to describe a section of a larger system, but the outlet flow from the pipe has no pressure, where in the actual system there should still be pressure.
To solve this I have tried to use another pressure function of time for the outlet, but COMSOL fails to solve even though the time-dependent function for inlet pressure worked. I have also tried tried modifying the outlet pressure according to Poiseuille's law as a function of p (pressure variable) and the diameters of each section of tube. What I have found to work, though it is inaccurate, is using a constant pressure for the outlet, using a fraction of p (e.g. outlet = p*.95), or using a constant velocity in the outlet.
Thank you
2 Replies Last Post 02.08.2017, 10:59 GMT-4