Dear Dr. Comerford, For Nektar to solve a problem, do I have to generate the mesh with a single type of element? Because, when I try to convert a mesh (which is the combination of different type of elements quads+hexas+prisms) like the one below to an .xml file via MeshConvert, I'm getting such a warning message: *"Different Types of Elements in Same Composite".* I have to define the whole body as a single volume to solve my problem. Is there any way to define different types of elements in a single composite? Regards, Kamil
Hi Kamil, Why do you need to define one volume in gmsh? You define the domain in the xml file anyway e.g. <DOMAIN> C[0,1] </DOMAIN> Andrew -- Andrew Comerford Marie Curie Research Fellow Department of Aeronautics Imperial College London South Kensington Campus London SW7 2AZ Email: a.comerford@imperial.ac.uk www.imperial.ac.uk/people/a.comerford On 26 Jul 2014, at 22:14, Kamil ÖZDEN <kamil.ozden.me@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear Dr. Comerford,
For Nektar to solve a problem, do I have to generate the mesh with a single type of element? Because, when I try to convert a mesh (which is the combination of different type of elements quads+hexas+prisms) like the one below to an .xml file via MeshConvert, I'm getting such a warning message: "Different Types of Elements in Same Composite". I have to define the whole body as a single volume to solve my problem. Is there any way to define different types of elements in a single composite?
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Regards, Kamil _______________________________________________ Nektar-users mailing list Nektar-users@imperial.ac.uk https://mailman.ic.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/nektar-users
participants (2)
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                Andrew Comerford
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                Kamil ÖZDEN