Thomas2019 wrote: ↑30 Sep 2019, 06:23
AratzH wrote: ↑30 Sep 2019, 03:45
Apparently the prism layer collapse settings don't allow to capture the leading edge of the profiles. The profiles themselves are within the rules with more than 10mm thickness. Is there anything we can do about this?
Known issue with snappyHexMesh. It collapses the layers in the most interesting areas. This is one of the reasons performance will differ in the race if you used a another CFD mesh & code to design your car.
In your case (and not allowed as part of the challenge), it would help to refine the mesh in this areas, which of course will increase the overall mesh size, which will impact CFD run times. F1 teams face exactly the same issue. This is one of the reasons, their meshes are 250M cells.
This is actually one of the interesting parts of this challenge. That you don't design a F1 car for the real world but for a universe where everything is meshed rather coarse. Copying real world high detail features like complex front wing is unlikely to work, as the mesh fidelity is just not up for the job. First to resolve the tiny gaps sufficiently and then to keep vortices "alive" away from the surface refinements.
Thomas
I would not call it a "iusse" but a misuse: simply the thickness of the airfoil is less than the geometric accuracy of the software (graphic engine): not only SnappyHxMesh but any CAD would have problems to distinguish upper and lower surface near the trailing edge (you can test this just trying to draw a line connecting upper and lower surface in a section, less than 2mm from the trailing edge). This happens because the difference of the tangent angles of the upper and lower surfaces is to small.
An heavier mesh is not alwyas the most smart solution.
In my opinion the "10 millimeters" rule (see the rullebook) is not so good to avoid this problem, and it is a non realistic restriction far from the traling edge. I would simply replace it with this rule: general minimum thickness (including the trailing edge) 2mm, except for the parts that are placed in the "High Resolution Folder" where 0,50mm would be ok. It would be also more realistic than cuspides (carbon layers can't be less thick than 0,20-0,15mm: in real cars perfect cuspides don't exist).
By the way: to avoid that problem, you can design your airfoild with a round (0,25mm) running on the tralining edge.
PS: I use Solidworks, but once I tried to model that kind of cuspdies with an high level CAD (Creo Parametric Advanced) and I had to manually set special values for the accuracy parameters.