For details, see Advection Scheme Selection in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.
The Transient Scheme settings are available for steady-state simulations and for transient blade row cases that use the Harmonic Balance
transient method.
For details, see Transient Scheme in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.
The Turbulence Numerics options are First Order
and High Resolution
.
The First Order
option uses Upwind
advection and the First Order Backward Euler
transient scheme. The High Resolution
option
uses High Resolution
advection and the High Resolution
transient scheme.
For details, see Advection Scheme Selection in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide and Transient Scheme in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.
Note: The settings on the Equation Class Settings Tab will override the Turbulence Numerics settings.
For details, see Monitoring and Obtaining Convergence in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.
Residual Type: select either
RMS
orMAX
.Residual Target: specify a value for the convergence.
For details, see Residual Type and Target Levels in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.
Conservation Target: optionally specify the fractional imbalance value. The default value is 0.01.
For details, see Conservation Target in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.
Select the Maximum Run Time
option if you
want to stop your run after a maximum elapsed time (wall clock time).
If you select this option the flow solver will automatically attempt to estimate the time to complete the next timestep or outer loop iteration. The estimated time is the average time that it takes to solve a previous iteration (includes the time to assemble and solve the linear equations, radiation and particle tracking) plus the average time it is taking to write any Standard backup or transient files. The time estimate currently does not include the time used by processes external to the flow solver. This includes mesh refinement, interpolation and FSI with Mechanical.
Interrupt control conditions are used to specify criteria for stopping a solver run independently of any specified Elapsed Wall Clock Time Control settings.
You can set Option to:
Any Interrupt
This option causes a solver run to terminate if the specified convergence conditions (specified under Convergence Conditions) are met or if any of the user-defined interrupts (specified under User Interrupt Conditions) are triggered.
All Interrupts
This option causes a solver run to terminate only if the specified convergence conditions are met and all user-defined interrupts are triggered.
The Convergence Conditions settings indicate which of the convergence criteria constitute an interrupt condition:
Default Conditions
With this option, the convergence criteria selected are those normally used for the type (steady-state, transient, harmonic balance) of run.
Selected Conditions
With this option, you can manually select the convergence criteria from a list.
User-defined interrupt control conditions are specified using logical expressions. These expressions are evaluated by CFX-Solver and are reported in the CFX-Solver Output file. After executing each iteration (of a steady-state case) or time step (of a transient case), the solver evaluates all internal termination conditions and all user-defined interrupt control conditions. If any or all (depending on the interrupt control option) of these conditions are true, then solver execution stops and the outcome is written to the CFX-Solver Output file.
Typically, interrupt control conditions are defined by single-valued logical expressions. However, single-valued mathematical expressions can also be used. In this case, a single-valued mathematical expression is considered to be true if and only if the result of the expression is greater than or equal to 0.5. Otherwise it is deemed to have a value of false. For a discussion on logical expressions, see CFX Expression Language Statements in the CFX Reference Guide.
You should consider setting interrupt control conditions if you expect your case to exhibit transient convergence behavior. For details and an example, see Using Interrupt Control in Cases with Transient Convergence Behavior in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.
Note:
To prevent a steady-state run from being interrupted before reaching the intended minimum number of iterations, each interrupt condition should include a requirement that the minimum number of iterations has been completed. For example, an interrupt condition could begin with "
aitern>5 &&
" in order to require that a minimum number of 5 iterations has been reached before the interrupt control condition can evaluate to true.Interrupt control is ignored in a System Coupling analysis. For details, see Supported Capabilities and Limitations in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.
The list box is used to select interrupt control conditions for editing or deletion. Interrupt control conditions can be created or deleted with icons that appear beside the list box.
If you have created any Junction Box Routine objects, select those to include in this Solver run.
For details, see User Junction Box Routines in the CFX-Solver Modeling Guide.