Encyclopaedia Index
CHAM's Special-Purpose Flow-Simulation software
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COFFUS
- Coal and oil-burning furnaces
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CVD
- Chemical-vapour-deposition reactors
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ESTER
- Electrolytic aluminium smelters (Hall-cell type)
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FLAIR
- Flow of air, heat and smoke inside buildings and other enclosures
- HOTBOX
- Flow of heat and air in electronic equipment
HOTBOX
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HOTBOX is a version of PHOENICS which has been customised
for the simulation of the flow of heat and air (or other coolant)
in electronics equipment.
- It differs from other commercially-available software packages
serving similar purposes in the following respects:
- it allows electronics-cooling problems to be set up by way of an
easy-to-use
virtual-reality
user interface, the input to which
may be the output from an industry-standard CAD package;
- it allows fine details of the geometry to be accurately handled
by the embedding of fine computational grids around them;
- it employs the unique and economical
LVEL method
of simulating the low-Reynolds number turbulence which
characterises electronics equipment;
- it employs the unique and economical
IMMERSOL method
of simulating the surface-to-surface radiative heat transfer which
plays an important role in evening-out the temperatures within
electronics equipment;
- because it can draw on all the capabilities of the PHOENICS solver,
it can compute the
displacements, stresses and strains, which are caused by the
non-uniformities of temperature, and which may influence the
performance or the life of the equipment;
- for the same reason, HOTBOX can also introduce fluids of more than
one composition and phase into the same simulation.
- Like PHOENICS, HOTBOX can be used on any hardware platform, from PC
to super-computer; and it works well on parallel PC clusters.
- Alternatively, click here
to ask a question, request a quotation, etc.