FEM SolverElmer/en

Description
Elmer is an open source multiphysical simulation software mainly developed by CSC - IT Center for Science (CSC). Elmer development was started 1995 in collaboration with Finnish Universities, research institutes and industry. After it's open source publication in 2005, the use and development of Elmer has become international.

Elmer includes physical models of fluid dynamics, structural mechanics, electromagnetics, heat transfer and acoustics, for example. These are described by partial differential equations which Elmer solves by the Finite Element Method (FEM).

Creating the SolverElmer object in the Analysis container in FreeCAD, gives access to the Elmer Equations for simple or multiphysical analysis.

Since FreeCAD already has an extensive integration of Calculix and  Z88 as solvers for mechanical and thermo-mechanical analysis, Elmer will be preferred for Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD), Heat, Electrostatics, Magnetostatics and Electrical Forces. It can also be used for mechanical FEA through the Elasticity equation or any combination of the aforementioned equations.

Installation
Elmer requires two components to be interfaced with FreeCAD: There are standalone programs for both of these applications but their installation and usage are beyond the scope of the FreeCAD integration.
 * ElmerGrid is the interface handling meshes
 * ElmerSolver is handling the computation.


 * 1) Go to the CSC binaries resources for Elmer: binaries OR CSC binaries
 * 2) Download and install the version best suited to your Operating System (Windows 64 bits or Linux)
 * 3) In FreeCAD go to
 * 4) Link the correct path for both  and
 * [[Image:Preferences-ElmerPath.png|Elmer Tab in FEM Preferences]]

You are ready to use Elmer in FreeCAD.


 * Now start FreeCAD and change the units scheme to MKS in the preferences. See Notes.

Usage

 * 1) Switch to the [[Image:Workbench_FEM.svg|24px]] FEM Workbench
 * 2) Create an Analysis container by pressing the [[Image:FEM_Analysis.svg|22px]] icon.
 * 3) Create a FEM Solver for Elmer, by pressing the [[Image:FEM_SolverElmer.svg|22px]] icon.
 * 4) * Note: A successful analysis will require at least a Model (2D or 3D), a Material (Fluid or Solid), a Mesh, Equations and Boundary conditions
 * [[Image:Elmer typical file tree.png]]
 * 1) Edit the parameters for the solver in the Property editor  tab of the SolverElmer object in the model tree view
 * 2) Double-click on the  object to prepare an analysis run
 * [[Image:ElmerSolver TaskPanel.png|300px]]
 * 1) Select the path to write the analysis in by clicking
 * 2) Click  to write the case files in the directory selected previously
 * 3) Click  to start the analysis
 * 1) Click  to write the case files in the directory selected previously
 * 2) Click  to start the analysis

About Equations

 * To perform the analysis of a particular physical behavior, an Equation must be used (Flow, Heat, Electrostatics...)
 * Disambiguation: The term Equation is used in FreeCAD to describe the different physical mechanisms, the term Solver is used in all Elmer documents. Thus when using in FreeCAD the "Flow Equation", in reality Elmer uses the "Flow Solver" to find a solution to the Navier-Stokes equation.
 * One or several equations can be used at once with Elmer by simply adding the equation object under the SolverElmer object, thus performing multi-physics analyses:


 * 1) Click on the  object in the model tree view
 * 2) Select an equation:
 * 3) * [[Image:FEM_EquationElasticity.svg|32px]] Elasticity equation
 * 4) * [[Image:FEM_EquationElectricforce.svg|32px]] Electricforce equation
 * 5) * [[Image:FEM_EquationElectrostatic.svg|32px]] Electrostatic equation
 * 6) * [[Image:FEM_EquationFlow.svg|32px]] Flow equation
 * 7) * [[Image:FEM_EquationFlux.svg|32px]] Flux equation
 * 8) * [[Image:FEM_EquationHeat.svg|32px]] Heat equation

Documentation
The following link gives access to the full documentation for Elmer. This includes the manuals as well as tutorials. Note that documentation and files appended with "gui" generally concern the usage of the Elmer GUI and not the FreeCAD implementation of Elmer.