SPH
Answers
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SPH models particles to represent your structure or some fluid. It's different than Eulerian and Langrangian approaches, and it is not mesh based. You can model SPH particles and add a solid material property or you can add a hydrodynamic model for a fluid behavior. It is quite versatile.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoothed-particle_hydrodynamics
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Adriano A. Koga_21884 said:
SPH models particles to represent your structure or some fluid. It's different than Eulerian and Langrangian approaches, and it is not mesh based. You can model SPH particles and add a solid material property or you can add a hydrodynamic model for a fluid behavior. It is quite versatile.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoothed-particle_hydrodynamics
So I just read that its a meshfree approach so is it like we can model some particles like solid itself but no need to mesh so only less time consumption something like that. Also it can e used to model both solid and fluid?
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Hello @Amith Anoop Kumar ,
The link below can help you get information:
You can use SPH in solid-liquid interaction and sloshing situations.
I hope this is helpful.
Best Regards
Ovunc
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