structured quadrilateral mesh in PDE Toolbox
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Natalia
on 5 Jun 2014
Commented: Alejandro Arrizabalaga
on 29 Nov 2017
Hello, I would like to ask if in the PDE Toolbox it is possible to generate a structured quadrilateral mesh instead of the triangular one? If so how can it be implemented in the code? My geometry is simply a rectangular of dimensions 3cm x 0.1mm and the mesh I would like to create is 0.5mm x 0.005mm. Here is a part of my code:
% Geometry description:
pderect([0 0.03 0.0001 0],'R1');
set(findobj(get(pde_fig,'Children'),'Tag','PDEEval'),'String','R1')
% Mesh generation:
setappdata(pde_fig,'Hgrad',1.3);
setappdata(pde_fig,'refinemethod','regular');
setappdata(pde_fig,'jiggle',char('on','mean',''));
setappdata(pde_fig,'MesherVersion','preR2013a');
pdetool('initmesh')
pdetool('refine')
Thank you very much in advance, N
2 Comments
Precise Simulation
on 22 Nov 2017
Edited: Precise Simulation
on 22 Nov 2017
Although an old question, as it seems to resurface again and again, for future reference the FEA Toolbox does support structured meshes with quadrilateral and hexahedral finite elements. They can either be generated with the built-in quadmesh function, generated manually through a set of grid primitives, or imported from an external mesh generator.
Accepted Answer
Bill Greene
on 5 Jun 2014
There is no support for quadrilateral elements in PDE Toolbox-- either in the meshers or the computational modules. However, if you have a rectangular geometry, you can generate a regular triangular mesh using the poimesh function. This option isn't available in the pdetool GUI so you would need to define your problem using the command line interface.
Bill
3 Comments
Bill Greene
on 5 Jun 2014
I don't know of any way to use the poimesh function with the pdetool GUI.
The only way I know to use poimesh is by defining your entire analysis as a MATLAB script using the command line functions that are part of PDE Toolbox. All of the examples on this page: http://www.mathworks.com/help/pde/examples/index.html
take that approach.
You might take a look at the example: http://www.mathworks.com/help/pde/examples/clamped-square-isotropic-plate-with-a-uniform-pressure-load.html
In this example the geometry is a square but you can easily make that a rectangle. That example creates the mesh with this function call:
[p, e, t] = initmesh(g, 'Hmax', hmax);
but you could replace that with
[p, e, t] = poimesh(g, 20);
Bill
PS: You didn't say why you needed a regular grid but if, for example, it is so you can get the results defined on a rectangular grid, you can perform the analysis with the unstructured mesh and then call the tri2grid function to interpolate those results to a grid.
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