This package provides a structure and examples of how to create simple medium models of incompressible fluids, meaning fluids with very little pressure influence on density. The medium properties is typically described in terms of tables, functions or polynomial coefficients.
The common meaning of incompressible is that properties like density and enthalpy are independent of pressure. Thus properties are conveniently described as functions of temperature, e.g. as polynomials density(T) and cp(T). However, enthalpy can not be independent of pressure since h = u - p/d. For liquids it is anyway common to neglect this dependence since for constant density the neglected term is (p - p0)/d, which in comparison with cp is very small for most liquids. For water, the equivalent change of temperature to increasing pressure 1 bar is 0.025 Kelvin.
Two boolean flags are used to choose how enthalpy and inner energy is calculated:
Currently, the package contains the following parts:
A few examples are given in the Examples package. The model Examples.Glycol47 shows how the medium models can be used. For more realistic examples of how to implement volume models with medium properties look in the Medium usage section of the User's Guide.
Name | Description |
---|---|
Common | Common data structures |
TableBased | Incompressible medium properties based on tables |
Examples | Examples for incompressible media |