The document outlines 25 steps to conduct an analysis in Ansys of an orificemeter. The steps include: 1) opening Ansys Workbench and selecting Fluid Flow (Fluent), 2) creating the geometry of cylinders within cylinders to model the orificemeter, 3) generating a mesh, 4) setting boundary conditions like 1 m/s inlet velocity, 5) running the calculation for 500 iterations, and 6) creating a streamline animation to view the results.
The document outlines 25 steps to conduct an analysis in Ansys of an orificemeter. The steps include: 1) opening Ansys Workbench and selecting Fluid Flow (Fluent), 2) creating the geometry of cylinders within cylinders to model the orificemeter, 3) generating a mesh, 4) setting boundary conditions like 1 m/s inlet velocity, 5) running the calculation for 500 iterations, and 6) creating a streamline animation to view the results.
The document outlines 25 steps to conduct an analysis in Ansys of an orificemeter. The steps include: 1) opening Ansys Workbench and selecting Fluid Flow (Fluent), 2) creating the geometry of cylinders within cylinders to model the orificemeter, 3) generating a mesh, 4) setting boundary conditions like 1 m/s inlet velocity, 5) running the calculation for 500 iterations, and 6) creating a streamline animation to view the results.
The document outlines 25 steps to conduct an analysis in Ansys of an orificemeter. The steps include: 1) opening Ansys Workbench and selecting Fluid Flow (Fluent), 2) creating the geometry of cylinders within cylinders to model the orificemeter, 3) generating a mesh, 4) setting boundary conditions like 1 m/s inlet velocity, 5) running the calculation for 500 iterations, and 6) creating a streamline animation to view the results.
To Conduct an Analysis in Ansys of an Orificemeter
Steps Performed in this activity:
1. Open Ansys Workbench 2021R1
2. Drag and Drop Fluid Flow (Fluent) as the Analysis System. 3. Open the geometry section in a design modeller 4. Create a cylinder and set its radius as 10cm, followed by the length as 50cm. 5. Create another cylinder of the radius of 10cm and the length of 5-8cm. Extrude the cylinder with another cylinder of radius of about 3cm. 6. Create the same geometry as mentioned in step no 4. 7. Create a thin surface of the cylinder of about 1cm. 8. Fill the Cylinder using the fill function and rename the outside cavity as the “Wall” and the inner cavity as “Water”. 9. Generate the final geometry. 10. Right Click on the mesh option and open the Meshing (Advanced Meshing). 11. Generate the mesh. 12. Click on the inlet face and rename it as “Inlet”, then select the outlet face and rename it as “Outlet” followed by the outside cylinder as “Wall”. Update the Mesh. 13. Right click on setup and open Parallel Fluid. 14. Choose the material as Water for the experiment. 15. Open Boundary Conditions and double click on inlet. Set the Velocity Magnitude as 1m/s. 16. Go to reference values and compute from inlet followed by the reference zone as water. 17. Go to Standard Initialization and again compute it from inlet. 18. Go to Run Calculation and set the number of iterations as 500. 19. Click on solve and wait for the system to solve. 20. Right click on Result and select CFD Post. 21. Select all the components of the pipe and set their transparency as 0.9 22. Create a streamline animation and start it from the inlet. 23. Click on animation and select Streamline 1 as the animation to be displayed. 24. The final animation would be displayed on the screen. 25. Render the animation in 1080p at 60fps and save it in the desired folder.