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Posted:
1 decade ago
01.10.2012, 14:41 GMT-4
it looks like what you try to model is not physical. Don't think It's possible to do it in COMSOL.
it looks like what you try to model is not physical. Don't think It's possible to do it in COMSOL.
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Posted:
1 decade ago
01.10.2012, 14:43 GMT-4
No dude. Its physical. I just one to block the field of other components from getting into a specific cube.
No dude. Its physical. I just one to block the field of other components from getting into a specific cube.
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Posted:
1 decade ago
02.10.2012, 11:26 GMT-4
just a guess but maybe you can try something analogous to a diode where you have high conductivity in one direction but not another. a very high conductivity is like PEC and will suppress your E field only in that direction. maybe you can do something like a conductivity tensor and define each element.
just a guess but maybe you can try something analogous to a diode where you have high conductivity in one direction but not another. a very high conductivity is like PEC and will suppress your E field only in that direction. maybe you can do something like a conductivity tensor and define each element.
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
02.10.2012, 15:19 GMT-4
Hi
you might get around with the geometry assembly mode for your "block" and then define yourself the continuity, one way on the common boundaries.
But still it hurts my sense of "physicsl continuity" I'm used too, but you are not saying much abut what you are exactly modelling so perhaps it's still "physical" ;)
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
you might get around with the geometry assembly mode for your "block" and then define yourself the continuity, one way on the common boundaries.
But still it hurts my sense of "physicsl continuity" I'm used too, but you are not saying much abut what you are exactly modelling so perhaps it's still "physical" ;)
--
Good luck
Ivar
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Posted:
1 decade ago
03.10.2012, 07:38 GMT-4
Hello.
Perhaps I have not understood well, but if you are going to simulate a static or quasy-static regime and a perfect conductor is a good model for your conductor, you can simply exclude that domain from the physics. This way, COMSOL hasn't to compute the fields (E = 0, aproximately) inside the conductor and you can impose the simple boundary condition of fixed voltage for the external surface of the conductor.
Bye,
Jesus.
Hello.
Perhaps I have not understood well, but if you are going to simulate a static or quasy-static regime and a perfect conductor is a good model for your conductor, you can simply exclude that domain from the physics. This way, COMSOL hasn't to compute the fields (E = 0, aproximately) inside the conductor and you can impose the simple boundary condition of fixed voltage for the external surface of the conductor.
Bye,
Jesus.
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Posted:
1 decade ago
03.10.2012, 11:34 GMT-4
thanks, I am now working on the ideas
thanks, I am now working on the ideas