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COMSOL, Inc.
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Bernt Nilsson, VP of Marketing
Reader Contact:
Bjorn Sjodin, VP of Applications
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COMSOL Multiphysics brings simulations to more applications, more users

The velocity field in a baffled mixer. Seen is the magnitude of the velocity on the blades of the propeller and in the slice plot. The velocity vector field is described by the streamline plot. COMSOL Multiphysics' new Rotating Machinery Application Mode is used to model such applications.

Concentration profile in the flow channels of a fuel cell stack are visualized in the new COMSOL Multiphysics GUI, which now features a Model Tree. This model also shows the new swept mesh feature.
BURLINGTON, MA (September 14, 2006)-With its enhanced features, COMSOL Multiphysics 3.3 brings simulation
and virtual prototyping to a far wider community of engineers. The
release also greatly expands the number of possible application areas
for the technology into virtually every field of science, research, and
engineering. Key among these enabling features are ready-made couplings
between common physics, an even more convenient user interface thanks to
a Model Tree, interactive meshing, merging components to build models,
the ability to handle CAD assemblies, support for the multiphysics
analyis of surface contact, and gains towards fully automatic solver
selection. Users can also expand on the package's internal material
database by enacting an online search of the Matweb database and
directly importing material properties.
Easier, faster problem setup
An aspect that makes it easier for the average engineer to successfully
create models is the increased number of predefined multiphysics
couplings. Users know intuitively what they want to do, for example,
evaluate fluid-structure interaction. Until now, though, to implement
unusual or extremely complex models they have needed a fairly thorough
knowledge of the underlying physics along with familiarity of COMSOL
Multiphysics' dialog boxes and the overall problem structure. Now they
simply select ready-made couplings from a menu with the correct physics,
boundary settings, and couplings already set up. Users then quickly
modify this interface to meet the specific needs of the geometry.
A number of new predefined multiphysics couplings join an already
comprehensive selection. These include microwave heating, induction
heating, rotating machinery, fluid-thermal interactions for laminar,
nonisothermal and turbulent flow, and fluid-structure interaction
A major addition to the COMSOL Multiphysics graphical user
interface is the Model Tree. This separate window gives an overview of
all aspects of a model by means of a menu-tree view that users can
navigate to inspect and modify context-specific features and settings.
All variables, parameters, constants, and expressions are accessible
from the Model Tree. A special condensed view shows only where a user
has made modifications that deviate from default settings.
Solving made straightforward, more transparent
When a model is set up, the software now takes a first step towards fully
automating the solver choice, a choice that is fully aware of the mathematics
and numerical schemes required to solve the multiphysics couplings. The version
also adds the PARDISO solver - a shared-memory parallel algorithm that works well
as a powerful direct solver applicable to, for example, large electromagnetic
models.
During the solution process a realtime probe-plot feature tracks the value of any
selected variable and graphs this scalar value in real time. Similarly, while the
software is calculating the solution, users can monitor a convergence plot that
shows the solver's progress on a realtime graph.
Parts and assemblies
Most CAD engines typically work with parts and assemblies, and COMSOL Multiphysics
now supports them throughout the modeling process. Rather than import an assembly
as a single unit, COMSOL Multiphysics now recognizes its constituent components,
each with multiple parts, for instance to allow for different materials in each
one. Parts and their physics can be coupled through a feature that allows for
continuity or allows users to define other internal border definitions such as
contact resistance.
Users can also start working with a library of components where each contains not
only a geometry but also a specific physics definition, boundary settings, and set
of material properties. Two or more components are then merged to build a more
comprehensive system, process, or assembly, all without each component's settings
being lost. This is ideal for a user investigating many different models that vary
only in a certain part or section of the overall makeup.
Interactive meshing
It is possible to optimize the mesh locally for each part or model subdomain through
the interactive meshing environment. This makes it possible to build a mesh in an
incremental fashion where each meshing operation acts on a set of subdomains. For
example, users can start by creating a boundary mesh and then mesh each subdomain
sequentially. Furthermore, using interactive meshing they can apply different meshing
techniques to different domains of a geometry object. Outside of the obvious benefits
for matching a mesh to a subdomain's geometry, this feature also provides improved
flexibility as sometimes the mesh must suit the physics found within one subdomain
that may not exist in other subdomains. The interactive meshing feature does not require
a nodal match on the boundaries between the different subdomains, instead connection
occurs through the mathematics of the numerical scheme.
Using the new swept meshing tool, which is fully integrated in the interactive meshing
environment, users can easily create prism (wedge) meshes and hexahedral (brick) meshes.
Multiphysics contact
The Structural Mechanics and MEMS Modules now offer increased support for contact problems
to bring to the industry the first tool for true Multiphysics Contact applications.
Identifying contact pairs at the geometry-creation stage, users can now model contact
and couple it with their other physics. Heat flux, electric current, and species diffusion
generated at, or flowing across contact surfaces, can now be modeled and coupled to the
material properties of the contact materials. This means, for example, that COMSOL can model
the generation of heat from contact friction and simultaneously couple and solve this with
contact and material properties that vary with the generated heat.
Price and Availability
COMSOL Multiphysics sells for $7995 for a single-user license and is available immediately.
About the COMSOL product line
COMSOL Multiphysics™ is a scientific-software environment for the modeling and simulation
of any physics-based system. A particular strength is its ability to account for multiphysics
phenomena. Optional modules add discipline-specific tools for acoustics, chemical engineering,
earth science, electromagnetics, heat transfer, MEMS and structural mechanics. Other products
include the COMSOL Reaction Engineering Lab™, which allows users to model reacting systems;
and COMSOL Script™, a MATLAB®-compatible programming language and command-line modeling
tool. These COMSOL products are available for the Windows, Linux, Solaris, and the Macintosh
operating systems. Full details about COMSOL Multiphysics and related products are available
here.
About COMSOL, Inc.
COMSOL was founded in 1986 in Stockholm, Sweden, and has grown to include offices in the Benelux,
Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and a US presence
with offices in Burlington, MA, Los Angeles, CA, and Palo Alto, CA. Additional information about
the company is available
here.
COMSOL and FEMLAB are registered trademarks of COMSOL AB. COMSOL Multiphysics, COMSOL Script, and
COMSOL Reaction Engineering Lab are trademarks of COMSOL AB. MATLAB is a registered trademark of The
Mathworks, Inc. Other products or brand names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their
respective holders. MatWeb is a division of Automation Creations, Inc.