Electro Static face (3D) / line (2D) region
Introduction
The face (in 3D) / line (in 2D) regions are:
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either material regions: used to model thin regions in the study domain
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or non-material regions: used to impose boundary conditions (BC) inside or on the frontiers of the study domain
Material regions (thin regions)
Thin regions enable the modeling of small thickness regions (cracks, air-gap, etc.).
The thin regions are described in the same way as the massive regions, with in addition the thickness of the regions.
In 3D, the direction of the E and D fields is selected by the user, as indicated in the table below.
Thin region | Direction of fields E and D | |
---|---|---|
no restriction | quasi tangential | |
dielectric (+ electric charge sources q) |
thin region with random ε permittivity |
thin region with: ε2 >> ε1 |
Non-material regions
Non-material regions enable to impose the boundaries conditions (BC).
A region… | is a BC that enables one to impose… | It is defined by… |
---|---|---|
Perfect conductor | an uniform electric potential and a normal electric field |
an electric potential: floating or fixed value (in V) |
Imposed surface charge | a surface density of electric charge |
a surface density of electric charge (in C/m²) (formula with input/output parameters or formula with spatial quantities) |
Imposed electric potential | an electric potential |
an electric potential (in V) (formula with input/output parameters or formula with spatial quantities) |
Normal electric field | a normal electric field |
an electric potential: floating or fixed value (in V) |
Tangential electric field | a tangential electric field | |
… on the faces/lines that form the region |