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Concentration boundary condition - v 3.5a
Posted Apr 27, 2011, 12:26 p.m. EDT Modeling Tools & Definitions, Parameters, Variables, & Functions Version 3.5a 2 Replies
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Hello there,
I have a question regarding a concentration boundary condition.
In COMSOL version 3.5a, if you take the "Convection and Diffusion" module and you go to "Boundary settings" you'll see that if one wants to impose a "concentration" as BC, the value of the concentration is expressed in mol/m^3 (in my case I am working with a 2D-axialsymmetric model but with a 3D case it's the same). Since we are talking of a boundary (a surface in 3D) shouldn't be mol/m^2?
I asked Comsol support and I got this answer that still left me a bit puzzled:
The unit of the concentration variable is mol/m^3. If you integrate it in space, in 3D, you get the number of moles of the substance. When you set the concentration you specify the concentration on that boundary (in mol/m^3). If that is integrated on that surface you get mol/m. This can be interpreted as the number of moles per m distance in the out of plane direction. That is if you extrude that surface 1m, the volume created would contain 1mol.
This explanation is still not clear to me. Do you have a "clearer" explanation? And in the case of a 2D-axialsymmetric geometry?
Any suggestion is more than welcome,
J
I have a question regarding a concentration boundary condition.
In COMSOL version 3.5a, if you take the "Convection and Diffusion" module and you go to "Boundary settings" you'll see that if one wants to impose a "concentration" as BC, the value of the concentration is expressed in mol/m^3 (in my case I am working with a 2D-axialsymmetric model but with a 3D case it's the same). Since we are talking of a boundary (a surface in 3D) shouldn't be mol/m^2?
I asked Comsol support and I got this answer that still left me a bit puzzled:
The unit of the concentration variable is mol/m^3. If you integrate it in space, in 3D, you get the number of moles of the substance. When you set the concentration you specify the concentration on that boundary (in mol/m^3). If that is integrated on that surface you get mol/m. This can be interpreted as the number of moles per m distance in the out of plane direction. That is if you extrude that surface 1m, the volume created would contain 1mol.
This explanation is still not clear to me. Do you have a "clearer" explanation? And in the case of a 2D-axialsymmetric geometry?
Any suggestion is more than welcome,
J
2 Replies Last Post May 21, 2011, 10:49 a.m. EDT