Theory for the Wall Boundary Condition
See Wall for the node settings.
Slip
The Slip condition assumes that there are no viscous effects at the slip wall and hence, no boundary layer develops. From a modeling point of view, this is a reasonable approximation if the important effect of the wall is to prevent fluid from leaving the domain. Mathematically, the constraint can be formulated as:
The no-penetration term takes precedence over the Neumann part of the condition and the above expression is therefore equivalent to
expressing that there is no flow across the boundary and no viscous stress in the tangential direction.
For a moving wall with translational velocity utr, u in the above equations is replaced by the relative velocity urel = u − utr.
For turbulent flow, turbulence variables are in general subject to homogeneous Neumann conditions. For example
for the k-ε model.
Porous slip
The Porous slip option, which can be chosen in the Porous treatment of no slip condition list when Enable porous media domains is activated, results in a special treatment of Wall boundaries and Interior Wall boundaries adjacent to porous domains (Porous Medium feature). Namely, similar to the Navier slip boundary condition, no penetration and tangential stress conditions are applied at the wall:
Here, Kn is the viscous wall traction, n is the wall normal, uslip is the tangential velocity at the wall while real no slip is assumed to be applied at a distance dw (half-height of the first cell adjacent to the wall) outside the wall, and is the porous slip length. An analytical derivation of the velocity profile in the boundary layer where the pressure gradient is balanced by the sum of the Darcy term, the Forchheimer drag, and the viscous term (neglecting convective terms) leads to the following expression for yps:
where is the porous length scale, is the non-Darcian coefficient (cF is the Forchheimer coefficient), g is the gravity vector, and ξp, l, Xp, cβ, cD, are intermediate variables. This formula is used when the Pressure-gradient formulation is chosen and it uses the pressure gradient at the wall. By default, the Velocity formulation is activated and the corresponding formula is:
Although this formulation is an approximation, since it uses the slip velocity at the wall to reconstruct the pressure gradient, it is rather accurate. Moreover, the influence of the convective terms is partially accounted for in this formulation.
Sliding Wall
The sliding wall option is appropriate if the wall behaves like a conveyor belt; that is, the surface is sliding in its tangential direction. The wall does not have to actually move in the coordinate system.
where t = (ny , nx) for 2D and t = (nz, −nr) for axial symmetry.
The normalization makes u have the same magnitude as uw even if uw is not exactly parallel to the wall.
Slip Velocity
In the microscale range, the flow at a boundary is seldom strictly no slip or slip. Instead, the boundary condition is something in between, and there is a slip velocity at the boundary. Two phenomena account for this velocity: violation of the continuum hypothesis for the viscosity and flow induced by a thermal gradient along the boundary.
The following equation relates the viscosity-induced jump in tangential velocity to the tangential shear stress along the boundary:
For gaseous fluids, the coefficient β is given by
where μ is the fluid’s dynamic viscosity (SI unit: Pa·s), αv represents the tangential momentum accommodation coefficient (TMAC) (dimensionless), and λ is the molecules’ mean free path (SI unit: m). The tangential accommodation coefficients are typically in the range of 0.85 to 1.0 and can be found in Ref. 17.
A simpler expression for β is
where Ls, the slip length (SI unit: m), is a straight channel measure of the distance from the boundary to the virtual point outside the flow domain where the flow profile extrapolates to zero. This equation holds for both liquids and gases.
Thermal creep results from a temperature gradient along the boundary. The following equation relates the thermally-induced jump in tangential velocity to the tangential gradient of the natural logarithm of the temperature along the boundary:
where σT is the thermal slip coefficient (dimensionless) and ρ is the density of the fluid. The thermal slip coefficients range between 0.3 and 1.0 and can be found in Ref. 17.
Combining the previous relationships results in the following equation:
Relate the tangential shear stress to the viscous boundary force by
where the components of K are the Lagrange multipliers that are used to implement the boundary condition. Similarly, the tangential temperature gradient results from the difference of the gradient and its normal projection:
Use Viscous Slip
When viscous slip is used, select Maxwell’s model to calculate Ls using:
Also see Wall for the node settings.
Navier Slip
This boundary condition enforces no-penetration at the wall, u ⋅ nwall = 0, and adds a tangential stress
where Knt = Kn − (Kn ⋅ nwall)nwall, Kn = Knwall, and K is the viscous stress tensor. β is a slip length, and uslip = u − (u ⋅ nwall)nwall is the velocity tangential to the wall. The boundary condition does not set the tangential velocity component to zero; however, the extrapolated tangential velocity component is 0 at a distance β outside the wall.
The Slip Length setting is per default set to Factor of minimum element length. The slip length β is then defined as β = fhhmin, where hmin is the smallest element side (corresponds to the element size in the wall normal direction for boundary layer elements) and fh is a user input.
In cases where the wall movement is nonzero, Account for the translational wall velocity in the friction force may be selected to use u − ubnd − ((u− ubnd) ⋅ nwall)nwall instead of uslip in the friction force. Then, the extrapolated tangential velocity component is ubnd at a distance β outside of the wall. Note that the Velocity of sliding wall uw is always accounted for in the friction force.
The Navier Slip boundary condition is suitable for walls adjacent to a fluid-fluid interface or a free surface when solving for laminar flow. Applying this boundary condition, the contact line (fluid-fluid-solid interface) is free to move along the wall. Note that in problems with contact lines, the tangential velocity of the wall typically represents the movement of the contact line but the physical wall is not moving. In such cases, Account for the translational wall velocity in the friction force should not be checked.
The Navier Slip option is not available when selecting a turbulence model. For turbulent flow, a Wall feature using wall functions or automatic wall treatment is required for the contact line to be free to move along the wall.
Constraint Settings
The wall feature uses three different techniques to constraint the velocity field:
Pointwise constraints is the standard technique to enforce strong constraints in the finite element method. The desired value of the velocity is prescribed at each node point in the mesh. Since the constraint is enforced locally at each node, only local values are affected by the constraint and the constraints are independent of each other. The solvers can therefore eliminate both the constrained degrees of freedom and the constraint force terms, effectively reducing the number of degrees of freedom being solved for.
The main advantage of pointwise constraints is that they enforce the constraint exactly pointwise. This means that they do not introduce any leakage of the velocity across the wall, unless specified. The main disadvantage of pointwise constraints is that they introduce locking effects when trying to impose a no-penetration condition for the velocity, u · n = 0, on curved walls or walls with sharp corners.
Weak constraints is an alternative method to prescribe the velocity. It consists on enforcing the boundary condition for the velocity via Lagrange multipliers. Their main advantage is that the Lagrange multiplier can provide an accurate representation of the reaction flux at the wall. Their main disadvantage is that they introduce extra unknowns, and are usually difficult to combine with other constraint methods on adjacent boundaries. Moreover, they may require extra constraints for the Lagrange multipliers. For more information, see Weak Constraints in the COMSOL Multiphysics Reference Manual.
Nitsche constraints use a numerical flux to prescribe the velocity at the wall. They impose the constraint in an integral sense rather than pointwise, and do not suffer from the locking effects introduced by pointwise constraints when trying to prescribe a no penetration condition for the velocity. They are also better behaved when prescribing nonlinear constraints. Their main disadvantage is that the constraint is only imposed approximately, and may produce small leaks. For more information, see Nitsche Constraints.
The following combination of Constraint techniques can be selected in the Constraint Setting sections of Wall boundary conditions:
Automatic (default) use different constraint methods depending on whether only the normal component of the velocity is prescribed, such as in the no penetration condition, u · n = 0, imposed, for example, in Slip walls or No Slip walls using Wall Functions or Automatic Wall Treatment, or both tangential and normal components are prescribed, as is the case of No Slip walls in laminar flow.
Nitsche constraints are used to impose the no penetration condition for Slip walls. When a No Slip condition is prescribed, pointwise constraints are used except for moving walls where Nitsche constraints are used.
Weak constraints. They are not available on Interior Walls.
Mixed constraints. This option is only available when both the tangential and normal components of the velocity need to be prescribed. The velocity on the wall normal direction is imposed via pointwise constraints. The constraint for the tangential directions is relaxed, and Nitsche constraints are used instead. This provides improved accuracy and performance when working with coarse boundary layer meshes. For more information, see Ref. 22.