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Ansys Lab - Heat Flow

This document describes an Ansys lab exercise to determine the temperature distribution over a solid with a circular groove subjected to different boundary temperatures. The solid consists of two materials and is meshed and solved for steady-state heat transfer. Boundary conditions of 1500C along the groove and 00C on the bottom are applied. Results such as temperature contour plots, heat flux vectors, and temperature gradients are examined to understand the heat transfer behavior.

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Ahmad Baltaji
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views5 pages

Ansys Lab - Heat Flow

This document describes an Ansys lab exercise to determine the temperature distribution over a solid with a circular groove subjected to different boundary temperatures. The solid consists of two materials and is meshed and solved for steady-state heat transfer. Boundary conditions of 1500C along the groove and 00C on the bottom are applied. Results such as temperature contour plots, heat flux vectors, and temperature gradients are examined to understand the heat transfer behavior.

Uploaded by

Ahmad Baltaji
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Ansys Lab Heat Flow

Lab exercise
Determine the temperature of over a solid with a circular groove as shown in the figure. A hot liquid flows
along the groove and keeps the temperature of the circular surface at T1=1500C. The top and side surfaces
are well insulated. The bottom surface is in contact with a coolant that maintains at T2= 00C. The solid is
made of two materials, with thermal conductivities K1=10 W/m k, K2=20 W/m l, R1=5m, R2=7m.
Liquid
T1

R1
R2

A r ea 1 ( K1 )
10 m
Area 2 ( K2 )

20 m

T2
Coolant

Initial Setup
1. Enter the ANSYS program by using the launcher

Click ANSYS now... from the launcher menu.


Type heatLab in the Initial jobname entry field of the dialog box.
Pick Run to apply the information.
2. Specify a title for the problem.
ANSYS Utility Menu > File
Change Title > Enter new title [ Heat Transfer ] > OK
3. Set up the graphics area.

Important note: The following settings for the Workplane, PlotCtrls, etc. are appropriate only for this lab
exercise. For each problem you must use geometry information from the model to decide on the appropriate
settings. The minimum and maximum dimensions are easy to determine from the model geometry. The
Spacing determines the number of grid lines that you'll see on the screen. The Snap Incr controls the
smallest value that you can select graphically. The selected position is rounded using the Snap Incr.
It is usually not necessary to manually enter the numbers in the View Settings in PlotCtrls. It is far more
convenient to simply play with the graphics controls to see when the model looks right on the screen. We
have given the numerical values in this lab to make sure that all of you see exactly the same graphics.
ANSYS Utility Menu
Workplane >WP Settings > Grid and Triad
Snap Incr[ 1.0 ]
Spacing[ 1.0 ]
Minimum[ 0.0 ]
Maximum[ 10.0 ]
> OK
Workplane > Display Working Plane
PlotCtrls > View Settings > Magnification > DVAL
User Specified [ 10.0 ] > OK
PlotCtrls > View Settings > Focus Point > XF
User Specified XF, YF, ZF [ 5 ] [ 5 ] [ 5 ] > OK

Preprocessor
From the ANSYS Main Menu choose Preprocessor and use the following menus to construct a finite
element model
1. Define the element type ( PLANE55, the 2-D, 4 node, thermal solid, and material properties)
ANSYS Main Menu
Preprocessor > Element Type > Add/Edit/Delete > Add
Thermal Solid > [ Quad 4node 55 ]
> OK > Close
Preprocessor > Material Props > Material Models > Thermal > Conductivity > Isotropic
KXX [ 10 ] > OK
Preprocessor > Material Props > Material Models > Material > Newmodel > Define Material ID [2] > OK
> Thermal > Conductivity > Isotropic
KXX [ 20 ] > OK
2. Create the solid model
(1). Creating one 10 x 10 square.
ANSYS Main Menu
Preprocessor > -Modeling- Create
Areas- Rectangle > By 2 Corners
[ WP = ( 0, 10) ]
[ WP = ( 10, 0) ]
> OK
(2). Create a quarter annulus.

ANSYS Main Menu


Preprocessor > -Modeling- Create
-Areas- Circle > Partial Annulus
[ WP = ( 0, 10) ]
[ Rad-1 = 7, Theta-1 =270 ]
[ Rad-2 = 0, Theta-2 =360 ]

> OK
(3). Use a boolean operation to subtract annulus from square (area 2).
ANSYS Main Menu
Preprocessor > -Modeling- Operate
-Booleans- Subtract > Areas
[ Square area ]

[ quarter annulus]
> OK
(4). Create second annulus (area 1).
ANSYS Main Menu
Preprocessor > -Modeling- Create
-Areas- Circle > Partial Annulus
[ WP = ( 0, 10) ]
[ Rad-1 = 7, Theta-1 =270 ]
[ Rad-2 = 5, Theta-2 =360 ]
> OK
ANSYS Utility Menu
PlotCtrls > Numbering > Plot Numbering Controls > Area > On > OK
Note: The PlotCtrls menu has a large number of options that you can select to show the model in different
ways. Try different options so you can get familiar with the available choices.
ANSYS Main Menu
Preprocessor > -Modeling- Operate
-Booleans- Glue > Areas > Pick All > OK
It is a good idea to periodically save the database. Ansys is fairly robust but it does crash once in a while.
After a crash you can resume from the point where you last saved the database.
ANSYS Toolbar > SAVE_DB
3. Mesh the model.
ANSYS Main Menu
Preprocessor > Meshing >Mesh Attributes>
Picked Areas >

[ Area 1 ] > OK > MAT [ 1 ] > OK

Picked Areas >

[ Area 2 ] > OK > MAT [ 2 ] > OK

Preprocessor > -Meshing- Size Cntrls>Manualsize


-Lines- Picked Lines
[ inner circle; r=5 ]
> OK > NDIV - No. of element divisions [ 10 ] > OK
-Lines- Picked Lines
[ top left horizontal line ]
> OK > NDIV - No. of element divisions [ 2 ] > OK
-Lines- Picked Lines
[ top right horizontal line ]
> OK > NDIV - No. of element divisions [ 4 ] > OK
Preprocessor > Meshing > Mesh > Areas > Free: [Pick all] > OK
ANSYS Toolbar > SAVE_DB

Solution Process
From the ANSYS Main Menu choose Solution and use the following menus to define the boundary
conditions and the initial solutions.
1.

Apply boundary conditions:


(1). Specify temperature along surfaces that contact with liquid and coolant

ANSYS Main Menu


Solution > -Define Loads- Apply
-Thermal - Temperature > On Nodes
[ all nodes along liquid surface.]
> OK > VALUE [ 150.0 ] > OK
[ all nodes along coolant surface.]
> OK > VALUE [ 0.0 ] > OK
(2). Apply insulation constraints along top and side surfaces and symmetric line.
ANSYS Main Menu
Solution > -Define Loads- Apply
-Thermal - Heat Flux > On Lines
[ The top two horizontal lines]
> OK > VAL I [ 0.0 ] > Apply
-Thermal - Heat Flux > On Lines
[ The right vertical lines]
> OK > VAL I [ 0.0 ] > Apply
-Thermal - Heat Flux > On Lines
[ The two left vertical lines]
OK > VAL I [ 0.0 ] > OK
2.

Initiate the solution

ANSYS Main Menu


Solution > -Solve- Current LS

Postprocess
From the ANSYS Main Menu choose General Postprocessor and use the following menus to review the
results
1. Plot temperature contour, and thermal gradient vector.
ANSYS main Menu
General Postproc > Plot Results
-Contour Plot- Nodal Solu...
DOF solution [ TEMP ]
2. Plot thermal flux vector
General Postproc > Plot Results
-Vector Plot- Predefined > Flux & gradient [ TF ] > OK
3. Plot the temperature gradient
General Postproc > Plot Results
-Vector Plot- Predefined > Flux & gradient [ TG ] > OK

Lab Report
Submit a concise report for the lab exercise. In general, the report should include a description of the
problem, the results you obtained, discussions about the results, and any particular issues you would like to
comment. For this lab, for example, you should identify what is differential equation that we are solving,
what are the boundary conditions, what are the material constants and so on. For the results part, it is
suggested that you include at least the following plots
(1). Finite element model
(2). Temperature contour
(3). Heat flux vector plot
(4). Temperature gradient

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