David Kan
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
1 decade ago
19.12.2012, 13:19 GMT-5
Hi John,
I heard back from one of our in-house experts and here are some snippets:
> This sounds difficult. The implementation would need a two-phase flow, where one of the phases (cement) is a non-newtonian fluid. Whether to use level-set, phase-field or euler-euler is not clear to me. Which thixotropy model to use for the concrete is also a research area.
How well the COMSOL solvers are suited for this task is also unknown. But you can give it a try!
David
Hi John,
I heard back from one of our in-house experts and here are some snippets:
> This sounds difficult. The implementation would need a two-phase flow, where one of the phases (cement) is a non-newtonian fluid. Whether to use level-set, phase-field or euler-euler is not clear to me. Which thixotropy model to use for the concrete is also a research area.
How well the COMSOL solvers are suited for this task is also unknown. But you can give it a try!
David
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
1 decade ago
03.02.2013, 18:11 GMT-5
Hi, I found some empirical information that may significantly simplify the problem. for a first order approximation: if the flow is turbulent then the cement slurry will displace the drilling mud. So the problem becomes one of 3D flow to identify whether any zones around the object will have only laminar flow,
What I think would then be valid is to assume turbulent flow, solve with k-e, find the lowest Reynolds number, and check that the Re is large enough that the turbulent assumption is valid. Do you agree?
Regards, John
Hi, I found some empirical information that may significantly simplify the problem. for a first order approximation: if the flow is turbulent then the cement slurry will displace the drilling mud. So the problem becomes one of 3D flow to identify whether any zones around the object will have only laminar flow,
What I think would then be valid is to assume turbulent flow, solve with k-e, find the lowest Reynolds number, and check that the Re is large enough that the turbulent assumption is valid. Do you agree?
Regards, John