Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
2 years ago
26.03.2023, 22:28 GMT-4
Sounds like you have one or more errors in your setup and specification of the problem. I encourage you to post your .mph file to the forum so that others can examine it and offer their suggestions.
-------------------
Scientific Applications & Research Associates (SARA) Inc.
www.comsol.com/partners-consultants/certified-consultants/sara
Sounds like you have one or more errors in your setup and specification of the problem. I encourage you to post your .mph file to the forum so that others can examine it and offer their suggestions.
Jeff Hiller
COMSOL Employee
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
2 years ago
27.03.2023, 09:06 GMT-4
Updated:
2 years ago
27.03.2023, 09:12 GMT-4
Hello Mohsin,
Your screenshot suggests that you have drawn the conductors and not the dielectric medium. In a typical electrostatic analysis, you are solving the equation for electrostatics in the dielectric, so it is the dielectric medium that make up the geometry with the boundaries of the conductors being used to apply boundary conditions (The inside of the conductors are removed from geometry entirely unless they are needed for some other physics). A good introductor tutorial in that area is this model.
Note also that if the "rods" are cylindrical, you can't get away with a 2D model.
Best regards,
Jeff
-------------------
Jeff Hiller
Hello Mohsin,
Your screenshot suggests that you have drawn the conductors and not the dielectric medium. In a typical electrostatic analysis, you are solving the equation for electrostatics in the dielectric, so it is the dielectric medium that make up the geometry with the boundaries of the conductors being used to apply boundary conditions (The inside of the conductors are removed from geometry entirely unless they are needed for some other physics). A good introductor tutorial in that area is [this model](https://www.comsol.com/model/tunable-mems-capacitor-123).
Note also that if the "rods" are cylindrical, you can't get away with a 2D model.
Best regards,
Jeff