There are a few Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) packages installed at ODU HPC.
OpenFOAM
https://www.openfoam.com/
scFLOW
https://www.mscsoftware.com/product/scflow
https://www.cradle-cfd.com/product/scflow.html
From OpenFOAM website:
"OpenFOAM is the free, open source CFD software developed primarily by OpenCFD Ltd since 2004. It has a large user base across most areas of engineering and science, from both commercial and academic organisations. OpenFOAM has an extensive range of features to solve anything from complex fluid flows involving chemical reactions, turbulence and heat transfer, to acoustics, solid mechanics and electromagnetics."
SU2 is a free, open-source CFD code useful for multiphysics analysis and design optimization in engineering systems R&D. Some of its capabilities include: discrete adjoints, non-ideal compressible CFD, incompressible flows with heat transfer, etc. SU2 is designed to be scalable and running efficiently on high-performance computing systems such as Wahab.
scFLOW is a proprietary "next-generation CFD tool that uses unstructured mesh to accurately represent complicated geometry". Cradle CFD website features the many systems that can be simulated using scFLOW. scFLOW is a powerful, practical CFD tool for academic uses. This software is unique in that it has all necessary tools in one package: (1) grid generation, (2) solvers, (3) visulization (e.g., SU2 is just a solver and users need separate tools for (1) and (3)).
Please check out the scFLOW prospectus & tutorial slides for details on the capabilities of scFLOW, some of which are intended to be run on desktop. The College of Engineering has Windows desktop environments at ODU MoVE with scFLOW desktop application. The high-performance, parallel scFLOW solver is also available at ODU HPC environment. The company (Cradle/Hexagon) has been very generous and is still providing ODU with 3 licenses to run MPI-parallel scFLOW solver with unlimited # of processes in the clusters.
Resources:
TODO (upcoming):