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This Week in CFD

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Software

  • Monica Schnitger delves into the appification of CFD with a look at Altair’s CFDCalc.
  • CFD Support introduced Water Turbine CFD, an OpenFOAM-based methodology for analysis and design of water turbines.
  • ASCON released C3D V15, the latest update of its geometric kernel.
  • Optimal Solutions released Sculptor 3.5 for mesh morphing.
  • VRMesh announced the VRMesh Triangulation for AutoCAD plugin.
  • DEVELOP3D writes about Materialise Magics 18 because it’s “utter nonsense” that 3D printing is as simple as loading your data and pressing print.
A CFD solution from Water Turbine CFD. Image from CFD Support.

A CFD solution from Water Turbine CFD. Image from CFD Support.

Odds and Ends

  • Here’s the best of the visualization web for December 2013.
  • Experimentalists have shown that the Navier-Stokes equations – specifically the Landau-Squire solution thereof – conform to the measured flowfield of a nanojet with a nozzle exit diameter of a couple hundred water molecules and a flow rate of tens of pico liters per second. [How low can you go?]

CFD and GPU

ANSYS announced the first commercial GPU-accelerated fluid dynamics solver. Developed in partnership with NVIDIA, the product reportedly halves the time to run ANSYS Mechanical and saves engineers days of time according to early adopters.

But ANSYS’ use of the term “first” in the announcement’s title made me scratch my head because I was certain others in the CFD world were using GPUs. So I emailed the ANSYS point of contact and received a prompt reply. [Thank you, Jackie.] The point they’re making is that their implementation is the first of the actual CFD solver algorithm in a commercially available product.

Symscape thinks that’s cutting a fine line. Their Caedium CFD is based on OpenFOAM, an open source solver, but GPU acceleration in their commercial implementation has been available for some time now. Are we walking the fine linguistic line between closed and open source software?

ANSYS’ news also came as surprise to CPFD Software whose Barracuda product has had GPU acceleration – in the solver part of the code – since last year. But they realize that their product is perhaps a bit too specialized to have as broad of an appeal as ANSYS’. But still, first is first.

What do I think? I think GPUs are a great compute resource that we should all consider as a means of improving software performance for our customers. I’m betting that ANSYS’ implementation will provide great benefits to their users. At Pointwise we did an in-house project a couple of years ago (results presented at the SIAM Conference on Geometric and Physical Modeling in 2011) that showed speed-ups of over 35 for some operations. However, we concluded that the GPU-specific coding would pose long-term maintenance challenges due to its complexity so we shelved the project. However, it’s probably something that we should reconsider given the improvements in the technology over the past couple of years.

Also, when we polled our customers very few of them reported using the appropriate double-precision graphics cards that we’d need. I wonder if that situation has changed?

So yes, I’m doing a lot of wordsmithing here regarding the word “first” at the expense of our friends at ANSYS. [Don't be too annoyed, ANSYS. I also poked holes in CD-adapco's beehive analogy for polyhedral meshing.] But I am now interested in knowing who’s writing CFD codes of any kind that use GPU for any part of the process. Let me know in the comments.

Applications

  • U.S. speedskaters at the Olympics are wearing an Under Armour speedskating suit that was designed with the help of CFD and which is said to be the fastest in the world. The only problem is that skaters are complaining that the suit’s design (specifically the vents on the back) are slowing them down.
  • IMAGINiT provides a case study of using CFD to improve the efficiency of an air-cooled condenser.
  • From the CFD Letters journal comes Numerical Study of Mixed Convective Cooling in a Ventilated Cavity Utilizing a Guide Baffle.
  • SpeedDream is using CFD to design the hull and keel of their monohull.
  • CFD is being used to determine where best to site wind turbines in a built environment.
  • Bureau Veritas has entered into an agreement with HydrOcean by which the latter will provide CFD services to the former’s clients and by which the former will market the latter’s services worldwide. The two organizations work primarily in the marine field.
  • STAR-CCM+ is applied to the aerodynamics of a football. [My favorite CFD application of the week. Be sure to watch the video.]
Screen capture from a video of football aerodynamics computed using STAR-CCM+. Image from ENGINEERING.com.

Screen capture from a video of football aerodynamics computed using STAR-CCM+. Image from ENGINEERING.com.

Events

Mesh as Fine Art

Brooklyn-based artist Lori Ellison has her second solo exhibition at New York’s McKenzie Fine Art through 16 February and many of her paintings and drawings seem perfect for the mesh generator in all of us.

I’ll quote Lori directly from the gallery’s website:

“Smaller work has an intimacy about it, and with intimacy comes familiarity and mystery. It is when one discovers both a sense of humor and a hidden depth. The problem with our levity today is that it lacks gravity. I aim for both. My choice of colors is good humored. My repetition has a wacky absurdity. My choice of motifs has a wry wit. One does not have to make large work to hold a wall. Compactness and concision can be a relief in this age of spectacle.”

You can tell from “wacky absurdity” that, even though she works in a different medium, she knows all about mesh generation.

Lori Ellison, Untitled, 2008

Lori Ellison, Untitled, 2008

Update [14 Feb 2014]: I emailed Valerie McKenzie, gallery owner, for background on Lori’s interest in mesh-like forms. Here’s her reply.

“Not only is the triangle one of the simplest two dimensional forms, it is also remarkably versatile in the creation of pattern-based abstraction that Lori favors.  Meandering triangles can swirl and coil into vortices, reticulated fields sway and have movement while referencing nets and webs of all sorts (actual, virtual, metaphysical, spiritual), and triangles set in rows have an interesting Op-like effect of creating a visual confusion between the figure and ground.

“Lori’s work references the natural world, architecture, textiles, the works of other artists.  She isn’t thinking of scientific imaging or mathematics.

Bonus: Caddell & Williams is a San Francisco based purveyor of “superb distilled spirits.” In particular, they stock barrel-aged cocktails from Germain-Robin including their series named Fluid Dynamics. The 3-bottle sampler is only $57 so I’m hoping one of you readers will try it and report whether it improves your CFD. If not actually, maybe just your perception of whether it’s better.



This Week in CFD

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Applications

  • In an article published in Nature Communications, researchers show that animal wings and fins (i.e. natural propulsors) “bend in similar ways within a highly predictable range of characteristic motions.” [Does this surprise anyone? Note: full article available for a fee.]
  • Here’s a performance study of OpenFOAM on the Intel Xeon E7 and other platforms.
Wings and fins pretty much all behave the same. Or so says science. Image from Nature Communications.

Wings and fins pretty much all behave the same. Or so says science. Image from Nature Communications.

News from CD-adapco

STAR-CCM+ v9.02 includes tumble and swirl cost functions for the adjoint solver targeted at internal combustion engine simulations. Image from CD-adapco.

STAR-CCM+ v9.02 includes tumble and swirl cost functions for the adjoint solver targeted at internal combustion engine simulations. Image from CD-adapco.

Events

Miscellania

Reticulation on Canvas

Laura Watt is another artist whose work “explores the possibilities of abstract content as found in pattern and color.” It just proves that you never know where mesh generation will turn up. ["Nobody expects the mesh generation!"]

Laura Watt, Memory Tool, 2007

Laura Watt, Memory Tool, 2007

Don’t believe me? I read a lot of stuff online and recently came across Kelly Norton’s blog (design + engineering) and emailed him about the banner image on a recent post.

Image from Kelly Norton's blog.

Image from Kelly Norton’s blog.

Not surprisingly, when I emailed him about the significance of this mesh he told me I was the first person to ever ask.  Here’s how he creates it:

  1. Generate N random points in 2D from a uniform source.
  2. Compute a Delaunay triangulation of those points.
  3. Pick a random color palette from a set of “good” palettes I have lying around.
  4. Render the triangles selecting the color of each triangle by mapping it’s position onto the color palette (colors from the palette are also assigned to the background and the stroke).

Would you care for some CFD with that Pi?

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I can find inspiration for projects just about anywhere. While many ideas are fleeting and only grab enough attention for a day or two of work, some stick around and snowball into interesting projects. This is a look at one of those ideas turned projects, the idea that I could run a CFD calculation in the palm of my hand.

The idea for this project started to materialize back in October after receiving an Arduino Uno for another project I was working on. If you haven’t seen it, the Uno is small, about the size of a credit card. It got me thinking, what if I could run CFD calculations on a computer about the size of the Uno. A phone was the logical choice. But compiling something like OpenFOAM for an iPhone or an Android sounded too daunting to even consider. What about the Raspberry Pi?

The $35 Raspberry Pi, developed by the Raspberry Pi Foundation, first launched in the spring of 2012 with 100,000 boards shipping the first day! The goal was to bring an affordable computer into the classroom and teach children the mechanics of computing. But hobbyists had their eye on the intriguing little board that could pump out 1080p video and interface with a number of sensors and other devices. Now, two years after the launch, there are more than 2.5 million Raspberry Pis in the wild.

The credit card sized $35 Raspberry Pi.

The credit card sized $35 Raspberry Pi.

The Tweet

After doing the research I decided that I’d hold off on the Pi for a while. Then, in early February, a #SimulationFriday post caught my eye. It was a tweet by Momentum Analysis with a picture of the driven cavity OpenFOAM case being run on two Raspberry Pis!

A two Pi cluster assembled by Momentum Analysis. Image by Momentum Analysis.

A two Pi cluster assembled by Momentum Analysis. Image by Momentum Analysis.

An aside, #SimulationFriday is a great hashtag on Twitter where engineers post simulation photos and videos every Friday.

The guys at Momentum Analysis had used an OpenFOAM build provided by Rheologic. Finally, there was a build available for the Pi and I no longer had to worry about compiling it on my own. I could get a Pi and be up and running in no time!

A couple days later, Momentum Analysis wrote a great how-to blog article about setting up what they refer to as a twoPi cluster. In the article they discuss how to setup the Pi, get the OpenFOAM binaries, and even described some of the tests they performed.

Ok. It was time to get a Pi of my own.

I should mention, not long after their post, I stumbled upon another article about a 40-node Raspberry Pi cluster here in the Dallas/Fort Worth area. The build quality is incredible and I encourage you to check out the video below.

The Pi

I did a lot of research before I purchased a Raspberry Pi. What I learned was that while the board is around $35, the accessories can add up. That is unless you have chargers, cables, and keyboards at home. After looking around I knew what I needed and where I would purchase everything. I settled on ModMyPi. ModMyPi started out manufacturing cases for the Pi, but quickly thereafter began selling a range of accessories. And while they aren’t affiliated with the Raspberry Pi Foundation, they donate 5% of their profits back to the foundation.

Rather than purchasing one of their kits, I decided to stick with the bare essentials and just find what I didn’t already own. Below is a list of everything I purchased from ModMyPi if you’re interested in pursuing the same experiment. Note, prices have increased slightly since I bought these items. If you register and follow them on Twitter you’ll get a discount.

The Model B Pi comes with 512MB of RAM opposed to the Model A which only has 256MB. This is important for both compiling software and running CFD calculations. I elected to spend a little more on a high performance SD card with NOOBS preinstalled. The NOOBS (New Out of Box Software) package allows for easy installation of many supported Linux distributions, including the official Raspbian distro based on the popular Debian OS.

The heat sinks are interesting. I wanted the ability to overclock the 700Mhz processor to 1Ghz without significantly reducing the life of the Pi. While the these heat sinks don’t dissipate that much heat, they do look pretty cool.

Three small heat sinks attached to the board.

Three small heat sinks attached to the board.

OpenFOAM for the Pi

Everything arrived last week, so I’ve only had a few days to scratch the surface. But, the first thing I did was load up the Momentum Analysis blog article so I could configure my Pi to run OpenFOAM. After applying all the necessary updates and playing with a few settings, I downloaded OpenFOAM and had the cavity case running in less than an hour. I was running OpenFOAM on a Raspberry Pi. I was able to run a CFD simulation on a device that fit in the palm of my hand. Momentum Analysis deserves a big thanks as their instructions were spot on. Thank you guys!

Running a CFD calculation in the palm of my hand.

Running a CFD calculation in the palm of my hand.

A couple days later I decided to run a Pointwise generated mesh in OpenFOAM on the Raspberry Pi. I ran a steady-state RANS calculation for the NACA 0012 at an angle of attack to the flow. The solution converged in five minutes. I was ecstatic! Not only could I run CFD problems on the Raspberry Pi, but I could run our meshes on the Pi.

If you’re interested in this case, you can download it and try it yourself.

Velocity field for the NACA 0012 solution computed by the Raspberry Pi.

The velocity field for a NACA 0012. This solution was computed by the Raspberry Pi.

SU2 for the Pi

I had accomplished my goal. I ran a CFD calculation in the palm of my hand. But, I couldn’t shake the fact that I hadn’t really done anything new. The Momentum Analysis guys already did this…in parallel. What could I do differently? What about a different solver? Enter SU2.

A couple years ago, a group from the Aerospace Design Lab in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at Stanford University released an open source CFD solver. The Stanford University Unstructured software suite, or SU2, is a collection of C++ tools for solving partial differential equations, including CFD problems. The team released version 3.0 of the code in January of this year.

Over the last few weeks I’ve been exploring SU2 for some in-house CFD work, so I’m somewhat familiar with the code and can build it reliably. So, I decided to download the source on the Raspberry Pi and attempt to compile it. My new goal was to package up the SU2 binaries for the Raspberry Pi and run the NACA 0012 problem. Easier said than done.

I wasn’t looking to do anything fancy, so a basic single-threaded compile is all I needed. I followed the well written installation guide provided by the SU2 developers and configured the makefile using only the prefix argument followed by issuing the make command to compile the source code. About 30 minutes into the build the Pi threw up a cryptic error message. Shortly after that, all the applications crashed and the GUI was unresponsive. Unfortunately, the Pi is not equipped with a power switch, so turning off the device is just a matter of unplugging the power, about all I could do at this point.

I reconnected the power to turn the Raspberry Pi back on and was greeted with a kernel panic. Wonderful.

Unplug power. Reconnect power. Kernel panic.

Unplug power. Reconnect power. Nothing. Now the Pi would no longer boot.

I pulled the board from the case, tested the voltage using the two contacts on the board itself. No power. It turns out a fuse had blown and needed a few minutes to reset. Great. Long story short, this process repeated itself a half dozen times followed by running the fsck utility.

The problem was either the SD card or the power supply. My guess was the board, ethernet cable, HDMI cable, SD card, and USB keyboard dongle were pulling more current than the ASUS Nexus 7 charger could handle. This in turn dropped the voltage below 4.75V and caused some instability. I have since replaced the power supply with a 5V 2.1A iPad 3 charger and have not encountered any stability issues.

Another potential issue was memory. I had been monitoring the memory usage during the build and noticed it creeping up to the 512MB limit. So, using the raspi-config utility I disabled the GUI and gave the GPU access to the minimum amount of memory. Next, I gave the Pi a static IP on my home network and enabled SSH access. The HDMI cable and USB dongle were no longer necessary. Not only did this solve the memory problem, but again I had fewer stability issues.

The Raspberry Pi Software Configuration Tool menu.

The Raspberry Pi Software Configuration Tool menu.

Every time I tried something new I reattempted the build, getting further each time. I’d estimate the entire build took around three hours to complete. Once it was finished I ran make install then archived and zipped up the result. I now had a Raspberry Pi Raspbian build of SU2!

SU2 compiling on the Raspberry Pi.

The first attempt at compiling SU2 on the Raspberry Pi.

The first thing I did was run through the detailed quick start tutorial to ensure that at the very least SU2_CFD was working. Sure enough, the steady, Euler calculation for the NACA 0012 converged in under three minutes.

The SU2 team graciously offered to host the binaries on their site for download. If you’d like SU2 for the Raspberry Pi, please visit http://su2.stanford.edu/download.html. You may notice there is also an SU2_EDU link for the Pi. It’s coming soon, but more on that later.

Lessons Learned

This was a great project. And while I’m happy with the work that Momentum Analysis and Rheologic have done, I’m glad I didn’t stop with the precompiled OpenFOAM build. It was great tearing through the electronics, decrypting error messages, and learning how to compile and run CFD software on a device that fits in the palm of my hand.

If you are interested in this project and are planning on purchasing a Raspberry Pi of your own, here are a few lessons I learned along the way.

1. Use a good power supply.

I can’t stress this enough. While the Raspberry Pi board doesn’t require that much power, it starts to add up once you plug things in. The Pi calls for a 5V 1A power supply. Most phone chargers will work, but in my experience some are flakey. I recommend going with something stable, preferably 5.25V to account for any slight voltage drops and 2A allowing for more peripherals to be plugged directly into the board.

2. Give the Raspberry Pi a static IP address and and enable SSH.

If you plan to do any kind of development or CFD, ditch the GUI for the command line and SSH into the Pi. Telling my router to give the Pi a static IP wasn’t enough, I also had to edit the network interfaces file. Here’s a great video describing how to give your Pi a static IP address.

Also, you’ll need to enable SSH as it’s off by default. This can be done through raspi-config, the Raspberry Pi Software Configuration Tool seen below.

Use the configuration utility to enable SSH through the Advanced Options menu.

Use the configuration utility to enable SSH through the Advanced Options menu.

3. Expand the filesystem and adjust the CPU/GPU memory split.

If you use the NOOBS package to install Raspbian, the filesystem will automatically occupy the entire SD card. However, if you install the OS in another way, you’ll need to manually expand the filesystem to take advantage of all the memory available on the card. You can also do this using the raspi-config utility. You may also want to give the GPU the minimum amount of memory. This can be done using the same utility.

Expand the filesystem to fill the SD card using the configuration utility.

Expand the filesystem to fill the SD card using the configuration utility.

4. Overclock.

Lastly, overclock. The Raspberry Pi doesn’t generate much heat and doesn’t draw much power. Exploit the efficiency by overclocking. A stock Raspberry Pi runs at 700Mhz. I’ve overclocked the CPU to 1GHz giving it what I’ve been told is an extra 50% more horsepower. This is where the heat sinks come in handy.

Select the desired overclock frequency for best efficiency and performance.

Select the desired overclock frequency for best efficiency and performance.


This Week in CFD

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Mesh pattern applied to the Stanford bunny in Meshmixer for 3D printing.

Mesh pattern applied to the Stanford bunny in Meshmixer for 3D printing.

  • Autodesk Meshmixer has new 3D printing capabilities such as patterning.
  • Lloyd’s Register has an opening for CFD Principal Specialist.
  • In the wake of CD-adapco’s STAR Global Conference…
    • Want to feel like you were there? Check out the photo gallery.
    • Read CD-adapco‘s own summary of the event. (The 2015 event will be in San Diego.)
    • ENGINEERING.com wrote about the STAR-CCM+ product strategy. (FEA is coming in 2015.)
    • EVP Bill Clark‘s video interview on YouTube gives great insight into the company. (ANSYS Fluent & CFX and OpenFOAM are their two main competitors.) [Bill is one of the good guys in CFD. He is worth knowing.]
  • Rhino users might want to get the new Android-based ViewER for viewing 3DM files.
  • For those of you interested in GPU programming, NVIDIA announced their GPU roadmap.
  • Here’s a brief case study of how JAXA uses Femap for their FEA analyses.
  • And here’s simulation of wave impact on submarines.
CFD simulation of wave impact loading on a submarine hull. Simulation by the Naval Surface Warfare Center. Image from ENGINEERING.com.

CFD simulation of wave impact loading on a submarine hull. Simulation by the Naval Surface Warfare Center. Image from ENGINEERING.com.

One Mesh, Two Mesh, Red Mesh, Blue Mesh

Artist Michael Sandstrom writes “My artwork explores how camouflaged political controls filter our understanding of history and relinquish our ability to accurately observe and respond to current socio-political events.”

Michael Sandstrom, Red Mesh, 2006

Michael Sandstrom, Red Mesh, 2006


This Week in CFD

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The First Heading

  • CRAFT Tech released CRUNCH CFD Version 3.0 with a new flamelet model, mesh adaption and more.
  • The 2nd AIAA Propulsion Aerodynamics Workshop will be held prior to this summer’s Joint Propulsion Conference in Cleveland, Ohio. The CFD test cases are available for download (registration required).
  • CGNS, the CFD data standard for portable and interoperable grid and flow solver data, is an AIAA recommended practice as well as an ANSI standard. An updated version of CGNS’ SIDS (standard interface data structures) is up for review and comment through 16 May.
  • Desktop Engineering writes about CAE simulation of arterial stents including CFD with STAR-CCM+.
CFD simulation of flow through a blood vessel with a stent by STAR-CCM+. Image from Desktop Engineering.

CFD simulation of flow through a blood vessel with a stent by STAR-CCM+. Image from Desktop Engineering.

The Second Heading

Flow visualization from FieldView for Concordia University's entry for the SAE Supermileage Competition. Image from Intelligent Light.

Flow visualization from FieldView for Concordia University’s entry for the SAE Supermileage Competition. Image from Intelligent Light.

The Third Heading

  • Scuderia Toro Rosso is looking to hire a CFD Aerodynamicist for F-1 work in the UK.
  • The Imperial College of London has an opening for a PhD studentship in high-order grid generation for CFD.
  • OpenBoundaries is looking for volunteers to test their “remote CAD on demand.”
  • Converge CFD is now available in the cloud via Rescale. [I can't remember whether I posted this already or not so forgive the possible duplication.]
  • Two eye-catching videos:
    • Realflow high viscosity chocolate test
    • XFlow simulation of an UCAS landing on an aircraft carrier
Mmmm. Chocolate. Screen capture from a video of a Realflow simulation.

Mmmm. Chocolate. Screen capture from a video of a Realflow simulation.

At Least It’s Not Paint

I promised to never post another photograph of thrown, spilled or tossed paint. So here’s one of sand from Claire Droppert’s series called Sand Creatures in which she seeks to “capture earth’s different elements and let them stand out in their natural surroundings using moments of zero gravity.”

capture earths different elements and let them stand out in their natural surroundings using moments of zero gravity.
Read more at http://www.visualnews.com/2014/03/23/sand-creatures-claire-droppert-captures-clouds-sand-mid-flight/#Me0xrf8fF5m2JL7R.99c
capture earths different elements and let them stand out in their natural surroundings using moments of zero gravity.
Read more at http://www.visualnews.com/2014/03/23/sand-creatures-claire-droppert-captures-clouds-sand-mid-flight/#Me0xrf8fF5m2JL7R.99
Sand Creatures by Claire Droppert

Sand Creatures by Claire Droppert

P.S. The headings are not a mistake. I simply wasn’t inspired to organize the links today.

P.P.S. My original “back page” article got too long so I’ll spin it off as its own post for next week. Sorry about the sand.


This Week in CFD

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Special Easter Weekend Edition

  • Must read: Now available via the NASA technical reports server is CFD Vision 2030 Study: A Path to Revolutionary Computational Aerosciences.
  • Good advice: How engineers can communicate better (from 3Dconnexion).
  • From the Pointwise newsroom:
    • We released Pointwise V17.2 which extends the T-Rex hybrid meshing technique so that layers of hex cells are created in near-wall and near-wake regions.
    • The Call for Papers is now open for the Pointwise User Group Meeting 2014 to be held 29-30 October in Anaheim, California. Abstracts are due by 18 July.
CFD simulation of automotive paint curing. Simulation and image from Convergent Science.

CFD simulation of automotive paint curing. Simulation and image from Convergent Science.

The Bloodhound supersonic car may truly be the most exciting and dynamic engineering challenge going on today. Judging by this picture from The Economic Times, one of the challenges is 1980s vintage CFD of an airplane flying in a tube. (This is the mainstream media reporting on science.)

The Bloodhound supersonic car may truly be the most exciting and dynamic engineering challenge going on today. Judging by this picture from The Economic Times, one of the challenges is 1980s vintage CFD of an airplane flying in a tube. (This is the mainstream media reporting on science.)

3D Printed Voronoi Polyhedra

I could not pass up this image from Pinterest of work by Michiel Cornelissen of a 3D Voronoi structure done using Grasshopper and MeshMixer for 3D printing.

3D Voronoi structure by Michiel Cornelissen

3D Voronoi structure by Michiel Cornelissen

[Which reminds me that we should really finish tweaking the 3D printing plugin for Pointwise that lets you print your mesh.]


This Week in CFD

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Software

  • Exa will be partnering with ESTECO and integrating modeFRONTIER with PowerFLOW.
  • Siemens PLM released Solid Edge ST7.
  • From FXGuide comes a preview of RealFlow 2014 [the videos are worth watching].
  • DEM Solutions released EDEM Suite v2.6 for discrete element modeling.
  • Symscape gives a sneak preview of passive species transport coming soon to Caedium CFD.
  • Autodesk Labs’ Project Memento is free software for converting 3D scans into high quality 3D meshes for 3D printing and other purposes. Version 1.0.8.0 was just released.
Simulation of coffee roasting done at the Univ. of Modena using STAR-CCM+. Image from Engineering.com. (Click image for source.)

Video screen capture of simulation of coffee roasting done at the Univ. of Modena using STAR-CCM+. Image from Engineering.com. (Click image for source.)

Other News

  • The International Journal of CFD (2014, Issues 1-2) is now online.
  • Here are a few examples of where COMSOL simulation is being applied.
  • On the PTC Creo blog, analyst Chad Jackson discusses direct modeling, parametric modeling, and simulation.
  • Autodesk announced plans to acquire Nastran from NEI and to produce its own 3D printer.
  • Are you an engineering manager? GrabCAD has a list of free resources for you.
  • From Aviation Week comes a description of NASA’s new small and fast approach to flight test demonstrations and a learn by doing attitude. [They had me until revealing a "Shark Tank" style selection process. Who will play the role of Mr. Wonderful?]
  • CFD for indoor smoke management.
  • The speakers have been announced for Flow Sciences’ FLOW-3D European Users Conference.
A faucet only a fluid dynamicist would love. The Axor Starck V. Click image for source.

A faucet only a fluid dynamicist would love. The Axor Starck V. Click image for source.

Two Quick Surveys

The Specific Impulses blog is back with the first installment of a series of posts simulating the tornado chasing Dominator. (Click image for source.)

The Specific Impulses blog is back with the first installment of a series of posts simulating the tornado chasing Dominator. (Click image for source.)

Do you take notes in class or at a conference with pen and paper or some electronic device? Pen and paper for me – too hard to doodle otherwise. (Issue first raised by Monica Schnitger in response to this article.)

What pointing device (mouse, trackball, 3D) do you prefer to use with your CFD software? Just a mouse for me, thank you very much. Although Pointwise does support the devices from 3Dconnexion and we just acquired a new device to experiment with. (Maybe we’ll reveal it at the Pointwise UGM 2014.)

Fortissimo is an EU project for cloud-based CAE. (Click image for source.)

Fortissimo is an EU project for cloud-based CAE. (Click image for source.)

All the World’s a Mesh

Or in this case, a spherical Voronoi diagram centered on airports.

World Airports Voronoi from Jason Davies.

World Airports Voronoi from Jason Davies.


This Week in CFD

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Applications

  • What is an unexpected place to find scientific visualization? Here’s EnSight in Jeopardy’s Daily Double. [Go to 1:39]
  • Here’s a video demonstration of applying Midas NFX CFD to an external flow problem. [1-hour recorded webinar. Includes intro to their product line.]
  • For those interested in efficient evaluation of B-Spline surfaces, Intel documents their work with OpenCASCADE here.
  • Here are some time-saving tips for STAR-CCM+ v9.04.
  • In the same vein, here’s a tip for SolidWorks Flow Simulation.
Fluent solution for a scramjet done by researchers at IIT Madras. Image from CFD Review. (Click image for article.)

Fluent solution for a scramjet done by researchers at IIT Madras. Image from CFD Review. (Click image for article.)

Events

This is Wartsila's FPP (fixed pitch propeller) Opti Design, designed in part with CFD. Image from Maritime Executive. Click image for article.

This is Wartsila’s FPP (fixed pitch propeller) Opti Design, designed in part with CFD. Image from Maritime Executive. Click image for article.

Not CFD

Because my first “real” job was doing computational work related to wind tunnel testing (running a method of characteristics code for models to be put in NASA Glenn’s 10×10 supersonic tunnel) I still have fondness for these test facilities. The photo below, taken from FYFD, captures the scale of some of the test infrastructure we’ve lost; specifically, AEDC’s supersonic tunnel.

The scale of AEDC's supersonic wind tunnel is impressive as evidenced by this vintage photo. Image from FYFD.

The scale of AEDC’s supersonic wind tunnel is impressive as evidenced by this vintage photo. Image from FYFD.

Software & Business

  • SCIRun, an environment for modeling and simulation, now includes biomedical components.
  • Exa had a good first quarter with revenue of $13.8 million (85% licensing, 15% projects) for a 10% increase year-over-year. [Reminder: I'm interested in Exa's business performance because they are the only all-CFD, publicly traded company that I'm aware of.]
  • Siemens PLM Software has released NX 9.0.2.
  • This is interesting. Graebert announced that they’re working on a DWG CAD editor (not just a viewer) for Android tablets. Actually, the really interesting part is buried in the promise of a “new tablet-specific user interface.”
  • Materialise’s 3-matic has joined Altair’s Partner Alliance.
  • The CAD Insider writes briefly about CONVERGE CFD.
  • The Texas Advanced Computing Center‘s 13th anniversary is celebrated in this infographic.

The Strong and the Lonely

Jonty Hurwitz works at the intersection of science and art. I believe from the title of his painting The Strong and the Lonely that he really understands mesh generation.

He shared with me a few thoughts on the difference between meshes for art and meshes for science and I’ve paraphrased them below.

  1. A mesh for art needs to touch on a deeper meaning than just the mesh itself. It is the responsibility of the artist to attribute this meaning and convey it.  In a way, the engineering “market” is easy, it’s about making something that resonates with a wider group.
  2. A mesh for art needs to evoke some kind of emotional reaction (other than boredom). [My god, he really does get meshing.]
  3. A mesh for art needs to challenge the norm in some way, push the boundaries beyond the way engineers see it.
Jonty Hurwitz, The Strong and Lonley, 2013. Image copyright (c) 2014 jontyhurwitz. All rights reserved.

Jonty Hurwitz, The Strong and Lonely, 2013. Image copyright (c) 2014 jontyhurwitz. All rights reserved.



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No Frills Edition

Screen capture from a video about the partnership of ANSYS and Ferrari. Click image for video.

Screen capture from a video about the partnership of ANSYS and Ferrari. Click image for video.

More Grids in Painting

Charline von Heyl’s Frenhoferin 2009 clearly utilizes a grid. But to what purpose? From a lecture by Daniel Marcus on the origins of contemporary abstract painting: “it is not so much a map of the picture surface as an active element in the evocation of bodily form.”

Charline von Heyl, Frenhoferin, 2009. Image from danielmarcus.net.

Charline von Heyl, Frenhoferin, 2009. Image from danielmarcus.net.


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Software Patents

In a closely watched ruling (maybe only by us software people) the U.S. Supreme court ruled unanimously in Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank that you can’t get a software patent for an abstract idea for the reason that it is simply a building block of human ingenuity. In other words, it doesn’t pass even the first test for patentability let alone those of novelty, obviousness, and vagueness.

This ruling does not imply an end to software patents, only that they must be more substantial than an idea that could be computerized and would actually need to demonstrate improvement to some actual function (i.e. actually be implemented).

Another interesting tangent on this ruling is that Alice Corp. is regarded as a “non-practicing entity” i.e. a patent troll.

Read coverage from:

Software

  • ENGYS announced the release of Helyx-OS v2.1.0, the open source GUI for OpenFOAM.
  • A new version of XFlow was recently released. [PDF]
  • Foam-Extend 3.1 was released.
  • PTC released Creo 3.0 including the ability to import models in other CAD formats.
  • SU2 version 3.2 was released.
  • CFD Support announced the release of Turbomachinery CFD version 14.06 (based on OpenFOAM).
Applied Math Modeling released CoolSim 4.3. Click image for article. Image from Data Center Knowledge.

Applied Math Modeling released CoolSim 4.3. Click image for article. Image from Data Center Knowledge.

Events and Business

  • CD-adapco announced a partnership with researchers at the Univ. of Stuttgart for the profiling and benchmarking of STAR-CCM+ on petascale computers.
  • Deadlines are fast approaching for the 2014 FLOW-3D Americas Users Conference including early bird registration (01 July), and abstract due date (11 July).
  • You have until 31 August to submit your entry to CD-adapco’s 2015 Calendar Contest. Maybe yours will be the one who gets the most social media votes and wins a cool prize.
  • The second NAFEMS European Conference on Multiphysics Simulation will be held 21-22 October 2014 in Manchester, UK.
  • ESI reported a 7% decrease in Q1 revenue due largely to the company’s shift to service deals. [Nothing reported about OpenFOAM's contributions to their numbers.]

Reading

Thresholds of Silence

Combining the old and the new, art and science, geometry and aeroacoustics, the Buitenschot Landscape Art Park near Amsterdam’s Schipol Airport uses well planned and deeply cut ridges in the nearby landscape to reduce the propagation of ground level aircraft noise.

Farmers have known for quite some time that deeply plowing a field creates a very quiet landscape. Through study of the noise sources architects designed these V-shaped ridges for the same purpose while at the same time creating a publicly usable green space. Seems like a win-win to me.

The landscape architect calls the ridges the Thresholds of Silence.

Buitenschot Landscape Art Park at Amsterdam's Schipol Airport uses these ridges to reduce noise pollution. Image from pauldekort.nl.

Buitenschot Landscape Art Park at Amsterdam’s Schipol Airport uses these ridges to reduce noise pollution. Image from pauldekort.nl.

P.S. Apologies if some of this news is repeated from last week. I was in a rush and didn’t do a good job separating old from new news.


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Applications

Very cool video of a simulation of a long-duration EF-5 tornado. Click image for article.

Very cool video of a simulation of a long-duration EF-5 tornado. Click image for article.

Events & Other News

  • The 3rd International Workshop on High-Order CFD Methods will be held 3-4 January 2015 in Orlando, Florida in advance of the AIAA SciTech Conference. If you intend to participate they’d like an email by 30 June for use in planning the event. Abstracts for presentations are due by 15 October.
  • Abstracts for the NAFEMS World Congress 2015, to be held in San Diego in June, are due 17 November.
  • Congrats to Tecplot for being named to the list of 100 best companies to work for in Seattle on the strength of their executive leadership (#19 in the mid-size category).
  • Pointwise’s own Travis Carrigan has his master’s thesis research included in Wind Turbine Technology from CRC Press.
CFD simulation for the purpose of evaluating pedestrian comfort. Click image for article.

CFD simulation for the purpose of evaluating pedestrian comfort. Click image for article.

Software

Tesla uses Exa PowerFLOW to evaluate aerodynamic performance in yaw. Image from SAE. Click image for article.

Tesla uses Exa PowerFLOW to evaluate aerodynamic performance in yaw. Image from SAE. Click image for article.

I Love IGES

There. I said it.

The folks at PADT blogged about their hatred of IGES files as a mechanism for transfer of CAD geometry in IGES Can’t Stand IGES Anymore! [Props for the wordplay.]

I am here to defend IGES’ honor.

Hating IGES is like saying you hate music on cassette versus LP. [Young people, ask a graybeard what a cassette tape is.]

Whereas PADT advises that IGES be your last choice for geometry import into ANSYS I’ll say that you should feel confident about using your IGES with Pointwise.

Image from Wikipedia.

Image from Wikipedia.

IGES is actually a pretty good format for sharing 3D geometry. (I am not alone in this opinion.) The format is well defined. It’s ASCII meaning that it’s readable. It takes very little time to become familiar with how an IGES file is laid out.

The problem with IGES files is that people write them in ways that explicitly violate the standard. One particular egregious violation is the definition of trimming curves. The file writer sets a flag that indicates whether the curves are defined in XYZ space or in the UV space of the surface being trimmed. That flag is often set incorrectly and the file reader goes to look for one type of curve or the other and can’t find it. Another example is the use of a string of points (what IGES calls copious data) to define a trimming curve. Unfortunately, that’s explicitly disallowed by the standard.

The result is that the file reader has to not just code to the standard but has to robustly handle non-standard files, a practice known as “flavoring” your IGES reader for files that come from specific sources (an IGES reader for CATIA, an IGES reader for Pro/E, etc.). You may infer that we have done a lot of that but we hide the flavoring under the hood.

To clear up some confusion, the IGES standard does include support for solid models, the so-called B-Rep Solid Model Object (entity type 186). So if you have a CAD system that will export solid models to IGES as 186s your reader should be able to import them.

In addition, we have implemented something (that works for all CAD import, not just IGES) that automatically assembles surface geometry into a solid (regardless of whether solid data exists in the file). On top of that, we’ve implemented something called quilting which is the ability to assemble multiple CAD surfaces into a single meshable region based on geometric feature lines.

Keep in mind also that when talking about CAD interoperability issues we need to distinguish between various error sources. One is accurate reading and writing of the file according to its specification. Another is the dreaded issue of tolerances and how they effect trimming and assemblies. Yet another is representation – how your CAD kernel represents a particular surface type may be different than how it is represented in the file you export to and different still from the way it’s represented in the system that must import it.

So learn to love IGES and we’ll all be happier.

Gridding Your Ceiling with Light

Interior designers are really embracing facets. First WoodSkin, then JOIN-Facet, and now LivingSculpture, a 3D modular ceiling installation consisting of individual quad OLED lights that can be arranged in a custom 3D shape and controlled interactively via an iPad.

Read more about LivingSculpture here and be sure to watch the videos. [Note: The page is written in French.] My office is going to get really cramped if I keep getting all this stuff. Also note that this is a logical extension of a 1970s era mirror ball.

LivingSculpture 3D Modular OLED system. Screen shot from a video of the lights being manipulated interactively.

LivingSculpture 3D Modular OLED system. Screen shot from a video of the lights being manipulated interactively.


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Special “Happy Birthday to ‘Murica” Version

News

  • DEVELOP3D writes about running SolidWorks in the cloud using NVIDIA’s Grid Test Drive.
  • Congratulations to Altair for being recognized as a 2014 Michigan Bright Spot, helping drive forward the state’s economy and innovation.
  • Do you find the Jacobi Iterative Method more useful now that it’s been sped-up by a factor of 200?
  • Read about how Autodesk Simulation CFD is used to design large video displays and related devices. (PDF)
  • More reading, this time about grid generation for near-field sonic boom prediction.
This real-time, animated flow viz will help you track how Hurricane Arthur is messing up July 4th for the U.S. East coast. Click image for website.

This real-time, animated flow viz will help you track how Hurricane Arthur is messing up July 4th for the U.S. East coast. Click image for website.

More News

  • A team composed of Argonne National Lab, Caterpillar, and Convergent Science were awarded an HPC Innovation Excellence Award at the ISC’14 supercomputing conference for their work on internal combustion engine simulations.
  • Journal article: The prediction of bending strengths in steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete using CFD. (registration required)
  • VirtualGrid released VRMesh v8.5 for point cloud processing.
  • Flow Science released FLOW-3D Cast Version 4.
  • The open-source PIConGPU, a GPU-accelerated Particle-in-Cell code, has been released.
  • There’s an opening for a PhD student in the field of fluid mechanics at the Vienna University of Technology.
Take 10 minutes for a video demonstration of CFD in Femap. Click image for video.

Take 10 minutes for a video demonstration of CFD in Femap. Click image for video.

Even More News

  • NASA’s CFD 2030 Vision Study has everyone [meaning me - you were probably already thinking about it] thinking about exascale computing. Scientific Computing World has a nice overview article on Exascale Challenges. Some interesting [to me] factoids include:
    • An exaflop is a billion billion operations per second. That’s what we in science call “a lot.”
    • How will we program applications that have billions of threads? And how will we do so in a way that’s robust?
    • Who is going to do all this programming? It’s not within the typical CFD programmer’s skill set.
    • Power consumption is an issue, not from the “green” standpoint but from the “is it really worth 250 MW to run one computer” standpoint.
  • IBM says that chips with carbon nanotube transistors will be available by 2020 and yield a 5x speed-up.
  • We in CFD often get trapped in certain ways of thinking, like how FEA is really mature, widely adopted, and robustly applied by non-experts. However, you can make the case that Mechanical FEA Is In Its Infancy with opportunities that sound very similar to those related to CFD.

Visualization Must-See

Because we in CFD rely heavily on numerical algorithms and visualization for our work, Mike Bostock’s work on Visualization Algorithms is a must-read. Not only is the work interesting, but its presentation on the web is fantastically visually pleasing. Take the time to read it.

quick-sort-visualization

A portion of a visualization of a quicksort algorithm. Image from Mike Bostock.

Mesh For the Lady in Your Life

Gizmodo wants us to believe that the line of ladies’ handbags, purses, and clutches from designer Issey Miyake are inspired by origami but we at AFM know a mesh when we see one. Check out this animation of the Distortion clutch on Gizmodo.

The Bao Bao website defines their concept as “shapes made by chance.” This tells me that Issey Miyake knows more about mesh generation than we might first think. Because sometimes it feels like whether or not meshing works is a random act.

This delightful pastel Prism Rainbow bag from Bao Bao Issey Miyake is the perfect tote for any CFD conference.

This delightful pastel Prism Rainbow bag from Bao Bao Issey Miyake is the perfect tote for any CFD conference.

 


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All The News – 2 Weeks Worth

  • Tecplot announced the release of Tecplot 360 EX with new technology they call SZL which promises 92% less memory usage and a 9.6x speed-up over previous versions. In addition, the software’s UI has been redone using Qt.
  • News from Intelligent Light:
    • Yves-Marie Lefebvre has been named FieldView Product Chief.
    • The company is working on EPISODE, a new tool for managing multitudinous large datasets.
  • Best of the visualization web for May 2014.
  • Sandia’s S3D direct numerical simulation software imposes serious challenges on postprocessing.
  • Desktop Engineering’s Kenneth Wong wrote one of the best overviews of simulation in the cloud I’ve read so far. [Paradoxically, reading it made me think that the more automated a solution is, the smarter the user has to be.]
  • Mr. Wong is on a roll: here he writes about why CAD interoperability remains a problem.
Composite image of CFD visualization from Tecplot 360 EX. Image from Tecplot.

Composite image of CFD visualization from Tecplot 360 EX. Image from Tecplot.

  • From International Science Grid This Week comes a photo essay on immersive environments. [If any of you regularly use a tool like this to investigate your CFD data sets, please comment on this post and tell us how useful it is.]
  • Simscale has open positions for computer scientists and mechanical engineers.
  • Flow Science was one of 10 firms awarded a grant from the Venture Acceleration Fund.
  • If you use the DAFUL multi-body dynamics software you might be interested in use of EnSight to visualize its results.
  • CFD helps design a new dredge ball joint.
  • CFD considers whether natural ventilation is sufficient to maintain comfort inside a building.
  • ESI announced the agenda for day 1 of 3 for their 2nd OpenFOAM User Conference 2014.
  • TheFDS-SMV (Fire Dynamics Simulator &Smokeview Visualizer) developers have a two questions for their users.
    • What’s the future of parallel processing using MPI?
    • What’s the future of 32-bit builds? [I'm interested in this also. Building Pointwise for both 32-bit and 64-bit is excessive in light of my opinion that the vast majority of people use the 64-bit builds. How might people react if we stopped delivering 32-bit builds?]
Example of the use of simulation to design offshore platforms. Image from International Science Grid This Week. Click image for article.

Example of the use of simulation to design offshore platforms. Image from International Science Grid This Week. Click image for article.

Music to Mesh via Math

We know how music sounds. But what does it look like?

When Texas A&M’s Prof. Tim Davis isn’t developing algorithms and programs used in MATLAB and Google Street View he develops algorithms involving force-directed graph visualization and other technologies to convert sound into sight.

Here’s New Order’s Blue Monday visualized with each note as a line and each tone as a color. For more examples of Prof. Davis’ work and details about how it’s done visit his website at notesartstudio.com.

New Order's Blue Monday is visualized in mesh-like form by Texas A&M computer science professor Tim Davis. Image from notesartstudio.com with permission.

New Order’s Blue Monday is visualized in mesh-like form by Texas A&M computer science professor Tim Davis. Image from notesartstudio.com with permission.

Bonus: Download and print your own jet engine!


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Big Things in CFD

  • Mentor Graphics has appended five new ones to their list of CFD Myths. I won’t spoil the surprise for you but will cite Myth #8: Experts Are Needed To Get Accurate CFD Simulation Results. [I recommend that you download, read, and start a discussion.]
  • CIMdata published their simulation and analysis market report in which they illustrate that the S&A market grew by 7.1% from 2012 to 2013 ($4 billion to $4.3 billion) and project compound annual growth of 7.7% leading to a market size of $6.2 billion in 2018. The report can be purchased here for $3,000.
  • Remember the CFD 2030 Vision Study and its estimate of an exascale computer’s power requirements? In a letter to the editor of Aviation Week magazine, a reader proposes powering this machine with a dedicated, modular, nuclear reactor. [Booyah!](Registration required.)
Using geometry from CT scans, this modeling of blood flow with CFD is one example of computational medicine. See associated text for link. Image from International Science Grid This Week.

Using geometry from CT scans, this modeling of blood flow with CFD is one example of computational medicine. See associated text for link. Image from International Science Grid This Week.

Software

Spider Man vs. Venom. Because mesh. Click for source.

Spider Man vs. Venom. Because mesh. Click for source.

Turbulence

  • To understand turbulence we need the intuitive perspective of art. [Factoid: Werner Heisenberg's - Nobel prize winner for quantum mechanics - doctoral thesis was on turbulence.]
  • On a related topic, FYFD‘s Nicole Sharp authored The Beautiful Unpredictability of Coffee, Clouds, and Fire.
"CFD is perhaps the most colourful technique used in engineering," is one quote from this article about CFD for a triathalon bicycle. 72% of the drag comes from what? Think before clicking the image for the article. Image from New Scientist.

“CFD is perhaps the most colourful technique used in engineering,” is one quote from this article about CFD for a triathalon bicycle. 72% of the drag comes from what? Think before clicking the image for the article. Image from New Scientist.

Applications

The effect of cooling fins (below) on the temperature of a hammer housing. Image from Mentor Graphics.

The effect of cooling fins (below) on the temperature of a hammer housing. Image from Mentor Graphics.

Space versus Place – The Grid in Painting (Again)

Another artist expanding upon use of the grid in abstract painting is Bill Mazziotti. By combining the grid with his organic elements of scraping the canvas and overpainting he creates a stabilized tension.

Grid-based paintings by Bill Mazziotti. Image from Donald S. Kolberg Sculpture and Painting.

Grid-based paintings by Bill Mazziotti. Image from Donald S. Kolberg Sculpture and Painting.


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Exascale on Your Desktop by 2020

Remember the CFD 2030 Vision Study and its identification of exascale computing as one of the pacing technologies for advancement of CFD over the next decades?

How about 17.1 exaflops by 2020 all while using power from your normal wall outlet? That’s the claim from Optalsys and their optical processor. Targets are 340 gigaflops by 2015, a few petaflops by 2017, leading to the exaflop model in only 6 years. The company is specifically targeting CFD.

Read more about Optalsys from HPC Wire.

Software

  • Pointwise V17.2 R2 was released with a major enhancement to hex layer extrusion in T-Rex plus other new capabilities.
  • CEI released EnSight 10.1 including native polyhedra support.
  • Materialise released 3-maticSTL 9.0 for working with faceted geometry data.
  • MSC Software released Marc 2014 which includes CAD and meshing improvements among other things. [PDF]
  • Siemens PLM Software released Parasolid v27.0 [Note: NOT Parasolids]
  • Desktop Engineering wrote about Tecplot’s ability to visualize a billion cells on a workstation.
An example of native polyhedra support in EnSight 10.1. Image from CEI.

An example of native polyhedra support in EnSight 10.1. Image from CEI.

Events

Applications

Maybe someday we'll find grids the way Yobi3D finds geometry. Here's what I got by searching for "landing gear." Click image for website.

Maybe someday we’ll find grids the way Yobi3D finds geometry. Here’s what I got by searching for “landing gear.” Click image for website.

Business & Other News

  • ANSYS continues to make money like they have a printing press in the basement: $232 million for 2014 Q2.
  • From sourceflux comes this 1-page OpenFOAM Cheat Sheet.
  • Lifecycle Insights provides a video preview of and a full e-book about design data exchange (i.e. 3D model exchange).
  • Crazy Aircraft Creations is the Shapeways on-line store of Mihai Pruna where you can buy 3D printed aircraft and CFD related jewelry and trinkets. [I like the Fluid Flow Around a Sphere in Color but it's a bit out of my price range.]
SolidWorks Flow Simulation of an espresso maker brew head. Image from the Solid Notes blog. Click image for article.

SolidWorks Flow Simulation of an espresso maker brew head. Image from the Solid Notes blog. Click image for article.

Wireframe Furniture

“Let’s admit it: wireframe views in CAD are awesome.”

So says the SolidSmack blog and I’ll agree and expand the scope of that statement to CFD software too.

I’m gonna run out of room in my office if I keep buying everything that reminds me of a mesh, but Noiz Architects and their line of wireframe furniture is pretty tempting. While you’re on their site, find the “strata fields” chandelier.

And why is it that architects are always designing chairs (e.g. Gehry, Lebeskind, Jacobsen)?

Noiz Architects presents their line of Wireframe Furniture, perfect for any CFDers office.

Noiz Architects presents their line of Wireframe Furniture, perfect for any CFDer’s office.



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Software

Autodesk Project Ventus

Autodesk Project Ventus

  • Autodesk Project Ventus [likely a variation on the Latin ventum meaning wind] is now available to shrink wrap a model and create a CFD quality mesh for their Simulation CFD product. Watch a video about it here.
  • If you have point cloud data you need converted to geometry, in early 2015 you’ll be able to try Thinkbox’s recently announced Sequoia.
  • Meshmixer v2.5 is now available.
  • I can’t tell whether this is a new project or not, but on SourceForge you can get OpenFOAM for MS Windows.
  • In case there was any lingering confusion about Autodesk’s acquisition of NEi Nastran [or parts thereof or whatever], Autodesk Nastran 2015 has been announced.

Applications & Other News

This LES computation of the wake behind SWiFT wind turbine was computed using the VWiS code from U. of Minnesota. Image from Windpower Engineering and Development. Click image for article.

This LES computation of the wake behind SWiFT wind turbine was computed using the VWiS code from U. of Minnesota. Image from Windpower Engineering and Development. Click image for article.

Reading

  • This is the best [only?] resource on hexagonal grid generation I’ve ever seen. [Not hexahedral grid generation.]
  • CD-adapco wrote about their global academic program which I think is great. We have a very large academic program as well. But one statement in the article got my attention: “Employers want engineering graduates to have experience using the same engineering tools they themselves use.” As you can see from the comments, if an engineering degree is about learning specific tools we’ve reduced it to a trade school.
  • Symscape takes a page from FYFD’s playbook with fluid visualization in nature. And they also published their newsletter for August 2014. [I like the heading "Design is Compromise."]
  • The Gothenburg Region OpenFOAM User Group Meeting will be held on 12 Nov 2014.

Not Meshing – Metaphysics

This video by Ben Ridgway has absolutely nothing to do with mesh generation or CFD but I thought I’d share it anyway. Cosmic Flower Unfolding investigates “the metaphysical features of reality.” For those of you who grew up in the 1970s like me, some of these visuals might be familiar – if you know what I mean.

Cosmic Flower Unfolding by Ben Ridgway. As first seen on Colossal. Click image for video.

Cosmic Flower Unfolding by Ben Ridgway. As first seen on Colossal. Click image for video.


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Hardware

Screen capture from Alex Haldane's winning entry in CD-adapco's academic simulation contest. (See link below.)

Screen capture from Alex Haldane’s winning entry in CD-adapco’s academic simulation contest. (See link below.)

  • An overview of how the U.S. government will push, prod, and pull us toward an exascale computing capability.
  • When it comes to simulation in the cloud you need to ask Which Cloud. Read more from Desktop Engineering. [Yes!]
  • MAINFRAME2 promises to “run any software in a browser” and offers Autodesk Inventor as proof of a CAD application. [Does anyone have experience with this cloud platform?]
Using overset grids in STAR-CCM+ to simulate gear lubrication. Image from Design World.

Using overset grids in STAR-CCM+ to simulate gear lubrication. Image from Design World.

Applications

cfd-cardio-disease

Velocity vectors for four aspects of a Fontan circulation. Image from the paper on cardiovascular disease cited above.

Software

CFD solution for an F-15E computed using MicroCFD's 3D Virtual Wind Tunnel.

CFD solution for an F-15E computed using MicroCFD’s 3D Virtual Wind Tunnel.

Events and Other News

  • Convergent Science posted the agenda for the upcoming CONVERGE UGM 2014. [PDF]
  • A student from the University of Warwick was named the winner of CD-adapco’s Academic STAR Simulation Contest for his work on LES simulations of poppet valves.
  • Papers from AIAA’s 1st Sonic Boom Prediction Workshop are available online.
  • CAD interoperability problems are a chronic condition; they can’t be cured, only managed. So says one contributor to Desktop Engineering’s article on the CAD interoperability monster.
  • Dassault Systemes has done a lot of work preserving the engineering that went into D-Day. [This is a very good thing for them to be doing. I can't find whether the models they produce will be available for download.]

Unstructured Seating

Faceted forms truly are taking over the design world. The latest I’ve discovered is Konstantin Grcic Industrial Design’s Chair_ONE. Someone  please try this and let me know how comfortable it is. I’m certain if you sit it in long enough you’ll have some very interesting impressions.

Chair_ONE from Konstantin Grcic.

Chair_ONE from Konstantin Grcic.


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CFD 2030 in Aviation Week – Again

As promised, Aviation Week’s technology editor Graham Warwick has delved deeper into the issues identified in NASA’s CFD 2030 study. From the 11-18 Aug 2014 issue…

  • In the article Model Future (page 49) he introduces the concept of maintaining a “digital twin” of a real aircraft in order to simulate its performance throughout its lifespan. This article also seems to be based, in part, on the panel discussion held at AIAA Aviation 2014.
  • In the article Quantum Shift (page 53) he delves into the futuristic topic of quantum computing as a means of meeting the computational requirements of CFD in 2030.
Geometry, mesh, and CFD solution. Image from Aviation Week.

Geometry, mesh, and CFD solution. Image from Aviation Week.

Good Reading

  • DEVELOP3D shares a nice overview of Autodesk’s acquisition and inclusion of NEi’s NASTRAN.
  • The CAD Insider is also thinking about Autodesk and NASTRAN.
  • Issue 36 [Why not a month and year?] of CD-adapco’s Dynamics magazine is available online.
  • Are you an OpenFOAM beginner? Here are 101 things to read. [101 things seems daunting to me in any list. I asked this on Twitter and I'll ask it again here: how many items in a list-based article is too many? As you are probably aware, I have a thing for the number 8.]
  • The Leap CFD blog has a great story about the use of CFD to design James Cameron’s DeepSea Challenger which he rode to the bottom of the Marianas Trench (11 kilometers down).
CFD simulation of DeepSea Challenger's thrusters. Image from the Leap CFD blog. See text for link to article.

CFD simulation of DeepSea Challenger’s thrusters. Image from the Leap CFD blog. See text for link to article.

Events

ugm2014-badge-date-180x180

Software

  • Is Autodesk Flow Design really the “easiest CFD program ever?” At $210/year it may be the least expensive (open source excepted, obviously).
  • Symscape shares tips for getting rid of acute angles in your geometry and mesh.
  • The CFD World blog has compiled a list of CFD codes for marine applications.
  • Autodesk Meshmixer v2.5 is now available.
  • When it comes to scripting languages, engineers seem to love Python. If you’re like me and don’t know it, here’s how you can learn beginning with An Intro to Python Scripting.
  • Speaking of Python, here’s a nice overview of PyFR, a Python-based CFD framework.
Flow simulation by PyFR over a 90 degree spoiler. Image from TechEnablement.com.

Flow simulation by PyFR over a 90 degree spoiler. Image from TechEnablement.com.

Applications and More

  • Visualization is such a huge part of CFD. Let’s see if you can be a winner. You have a little more than a week to submit your entry for the Information is Beautiful 2014 Awards, sponsored by Kantar.
  • Buried about a third of the way down in the SIGGRAPH 2014 review article in upFront.eZine is a tantalizing teaser about a potential solution to the fat-finger problem for tablet usage of CAD.
  • For more about SIGGRAPH, check out this summary from Desktop Engineering: Wowing Them in Vancouver. [If you do nothing else, watch the Best in Show winning video called Box.]
  • The second edition of I do like CFD is available in both print and PDF formats.
  • All the presentations from the OpenVSP Workshop v3 are available for you to download and read. [Don't miss Travis Carrigan's presentation on VSP to CFD with Pointwise.]
  • Read about a unique application of CFD in Improved performance of partly pit exhaust systems in pig housing. (From today’s #SimulationFriday on Twiter.)
  • Wind tunnel and CFD study of the natural convection performance of a commercial multi-directional wind tower.
CFD and experimental results for a wind tower. From the article cited above.

CFD and experimental results for a wind tower. From the article cited above.

Gridding for the Cycle

From Buffalo’s Albright-Knox Art Gallery [well worth a visit if you're in the area] comes this 3D surface grid – otherwise known as Cycle by Sopheap Pich. He draws inspiration from his native Cambodia and his painful memories of the Khmer Rouge to create modern forms that reflect organic shapes. These shapes, simultaneously human and digital, are made from materials such as bamboo that are native to his homeland.

Sopheap Pich, Cycle, 2011

Sopheap Pich, Cycle, 2011


This Week in CFD

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News

Use of ANSYS for mixing simulations is the subject of an article on the Leap CFD blog. Click image for article.

Use of ANSYS for mixing simulations is the subject of an article on the Leap CFD blog. Click image for article.

Software

  • Photogrammetry is now free for everyone courtesy of Acute3D. At SIGGRAPH 2014 the company announced Smart3DCapture Free and Basic editions (the latter costs 199€). Photograph an object from as many angles as possible and use the desktop software to turn them into a 3D model. [Gonna have to try this.]
  • Polygonica is software for working with faceted geometry data.
  • FlowVision is a finite-volume CFD solver written in C++ and delivered in both serial and parallel version.

Technology

Meshing the Walls

Part interior design, part sculpture, all mesh. The basic forms of this wall-mounted tet mesh seem easy enough to build and install but if you watch the video you’ll see that the manner in which it is lit is an entirely different story. It’s all from an artist group called Antivj.

Light Sculpture by artist group Antivj. Click image for source.

Light Sculpture by artist group Antivj. Click image for source.


This Week in CFD

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Hardware

  • The U.S. Congress is getting involved in exascale computing through the House’s passing of the American Super Computing Leadership Act by which the Dept. of Energy is tasked with advancing U.S. supercomputing via a number of methods including establishment of at least two gov’t-academia-industry partnerships. (Note: The Senate still needs to consider this act.)
  • The future of simulation driven product development resides in the cloud says the CEO of Hi Tech CAE because of the high demand to be placed on computing resources.
CFD solution for an F-1 race car from the CFD is the Future website. See link above.

CFD solution for an F-1 race car from the CFD is the Future website. See link below.

Software

  • Version 0.3 of SpeedIT FLOW is now available. This RANS solver (appears to be based on OpenFOAM) runs entirely on the GPU.
  • Rhino users can now generate NACA airfoils using the SeaHorse Foils plugin.
  • Autodesk is currently testing Project Arro, a new tool for cleaning up CAD geometry so that it’s ready for simulation.
Preview of Autodesk's Project Arro, specifically the stitch function for finding gaps in geometry. See link above.

Preview of Autodesk’s Project Arro, specifically the stitch function for finding gaps in geometry. See link above.

Getting Started in Simulation

After reading How to Form an Engineering Simulation Plan by the president of CAE Associates in R&D Magazine I was like, “Dang, there goes one-third of my content for next Tuesday’s webinar.”

For those of you new to simulation (or CFD specifically), the article goes into detail on how to bring simulation into your organization. Here are the highlights [as paraphrased by me].

  1. Start simple. Computing a time-dependent simulation of multiple moving bodies in reacting flow might not be the best “out of the box” test.
  2. Know what you want from the simulation. “Color pictures” is a valid answer, just not a good one.
  3. Stay narrowly focused on what you want to simulate.
  4. Train everyone on the simulation tools. They are not black boxes.
  5. Understand what your success criteria are.
  6. Know the limitations of your design and the tools.
  7. Validate, validate, validate. Can’t emphasize this enough. Running validation benchmarks is a great learning exercise and confidence builder.
  8. Allocate the appropriate resources.
  9. Be flexible.

If you’re still interested even after reading the article, join me and ENGINEERING.com’s Shawn Wasserman next Tuesday, 16 September, at 2:00 p.m. eastern for a wide-ranging conversation about why It’s a Wonderful Time To Be Using CFD.

Applications

Meshing

  • An improved orthogonal grid generation method for solving flows past highly cambered airfoils with and without roughness elements. (Registration and fee required.)
  • LearnCAx wades into the mesh quality debate with the article “A good-looking mesh isn’t always the best.”
A good mesh sometimes looks not-so-good or so says LearnCAx. See link above.

A good mesh sometimes looks not-so-good or so says LearnCAx. See link above.

Events & More

Abstractly Systematic

A valued reader (thank you) emailed me a link to the Systems Art blog and website, an online forum for exploring the use of systems theory for looking at extant works and creating new ones.

I bet you can appreciate how systems theory can be applied to certain types of geometric abstractions: Mondrian, for example.

Three excellent examples of Mondrian's painting. Click image for source (a very nice article unto itself).

Three excellent examples of Mondrian’s painting. Click image for source (a very nice article unto itself).

But I suppose the works of Jackson Pollock might challenge any systematic attempts at understanding. However, on the Systems Art blog you can read about “random regularity” and how his paintings (and those of others) can be interpreted.

Author Aldous Huxley once asked rhetorically how Pollock knew when he was done painting. Whether in response to Huxley or someone else, Pollock reportedly answered “How do you know when you’re done making love?”


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