OpenFOAM (Open Field Operation And Manipulation)[8] is a C++ toolbox for the development of customized numerical solvers, and pre-/post-processing utilities for the solution of continuum mechanics problems, most prominently including computational fluid dynamics (CFD).

OpenFOAM
Original author(s)Henry Weller and Hrvoje Jasak[1]
Developer(s)CFD Direct Ltd.[2] / OpenCFD Ltd.[3] / Wikki Ltd.,[4] and community
Initial release10 December 2004; 19 years ago (2004-12-10)[5]
Stable release
v12 9 July 2024 (2024-07-09)[6] / v2312 22 December 2023 (2023-12-22)[7]
Repository
Written inC++
Operating systemUnix / Linux / Windows
TypeComputational fluid dynamics, simulation software, fluid structure interaction
LicenseGPL-v3.0-or-later
Websiteopenfoam.org / openfoam.com

The OpenFOAM software is used in research organisations, academic institutes and across many types of industries, for example, automotive, manufacturing, process engineering, environmental engineering and marine energy.[9]

OpenFOAM is open-source software which is freely available and licensed under the GNU General Public License Version 3, with the following variants:

  1. OpenFOAM, released by OpenCFD Ltd. (with the name trademarked since 2007[10]) first released as open-source in 2004. (Note: since 2012, OpenCFD Ltd is wholly-owned subsidiary of ESI Group)
  2. FOAM-Extend, released by Wikki Ltd. (since 2009)
  3. OpenFOAM, released by OpenFOAM Foundation. (since 2011)

History

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Flow simulation using OpenFOAM and ParaView for visualization

The name FOAM has been claimed to appear for the first time as a post-processing tool written by Charlie Hill, in the early 90s in Prof. David Gosman's group in Imperial College London.[citation needed] As a counter argument [verification needed], it has been claimed that Henry Weller created the FOAM library for field operation and manipulation which interfaced to the GUISE (Graphical User Interface Software Environment) which was created by Charlie Hill for interfacing to AVS.

As a continuum mechanics / computational fluid dynamics tool, the first development of FOAM (which became OpenFOAM later on) was virtually always presumed to be initiated by Henry Weller at the same institute by using the C++ programming language rather than the de facto standard programming language FORTRAN of the time to develop a powerful and flexible general simulation platform. From this initiation to the founding of a company called Nabla Ltd, (predominantly) Henry Weller and Hrvoje Jasak carried out the basic development of the software for almost a decade.[11] For a few years, FOAM was sold as a commercial code by Nabla Ltd.,[12] on 10 December 2004, it was released under GPL and renamed to OpenFOAM.[5]

In 2004, Nabla Ltd was folded. Immediately afterwards, Henry Weller, Chris Greenshields and Mattijs Janssens founded OpenCFD Ltd to develop and release OpenFOAM.[13] At the same time, Hrvoje Jasak founded the consulting company Wikki Ltd[14] and maintained a fork of OpenFOAM called openfoam-extend, later renamed to foam-extend.

In April 2008, the OpenFOAM development moved to using git for its source code repository.[15]

On 5 August 2011, OpenCFD transferred the OpenFOAM software (source code) and documentation from OpenCFD to the newly incorporated OpenFOAM Foundation, registered in Delaware State, USA.[16]

On 8 August 2011, OpenCFD was acquired by Silicon Graphics International (SGI).[17] On 12 September 2012, ESI Group announced the acquisition of OpenCFD Ltd,[18] becoming a wholly-owned subsidiary of ESI Group, and OpenCFD retaining its ownership of the OpenFOAM trademark.

On 25 April 2014, The OpenFOAM Foundation Ltd was incorporated in England, as a company limited by guarantee with all assets transferred to the UK and the US entity dissolved, together with changes to the governance of the Foundation. Weller and Greenshields left OpenCFD and formed CFD Direct Ltd in March 2015.[19]

On 3 September 2024, Cristel de Rouvray, CEO of ESI Group officially resigned as Founder Member and director of The OpenFOAM Foundation Limited.

The OpenFOAM Foundation Ltd directors are Henry Weller, Chris Greenshields, and Brendan Bouffler.

The following are the three main variants of OpenFOAM:

  1. OpenFOAM, Foundation, developed and maintained primarily by CFD Direct Ltd with a sequence based identifier (e.g. 6.0) (from 2011).[20]
  2. OpenFOAM, OpenCFD, developed and maintained mainly by OpenCFD Ltd, (ESI Group company since 2012) with a date-of-release identifier (e.g. v1606) (from 2016).[21]
  3. The FOAM-Extend Project, mainly maintained by Wikki Ltd. (from 2009).

OpenFOAM Governance

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aeronautics

In 2018, OpenCFD Ltd. and some of its industrial, academic, and community partners established an administrative body, i.e. OpenFOAM Governance, to allow the OpenFOAM's user community to decide/contribute the future development and direction of their variant of the software.[22]

The structure of OpenFOAM Governance consisted of a Steering Committee and various Technical Committees. The Steering Committee comprised representatives from the main sponsors of OpenFOAM in industry, academia, release authorities and consultant organisations. The organisation composition of the initial committee involved members from OpenCFD Ltd., ESI Group, Volkswagen, General Motors, FM Global, TotalSim Ltd., TU Darmstadt, and Wikki Ltd.[23]

In addition, nine technical committees were established in the following areas: Documentation, high performance computing, meshing, multiphase, numerics, optimisation, turbulence, marine applications, and nuclear applications with the members from the organisations of OpenCFD Ltd., CINECA, University of Zagreb, TU Darmstadt, National Technical University of Athens, Upstream CFD GmbH, University of Michigan, and EPFL.[24]

Structure

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Overview of OpenFOAM software directory structure

Software structure

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The OpenFOAM directory structure consists of two main directories:

  • OpenFOAM-<version>: OpenFOAM libraries whose directory layout is shown in the side-figure
  • ThirdParty: A set of third-party libraries

Simulation structure

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OpenFOAM computer simulations are configured by several plain text input files located across the following three directories:[25]

  • system/
    • controlDict
    • fvSchemes
    • fvSolution
    • fvOptions (optional)
    • other dictionaries (configuration files in OpenFOAM)
  • constant
    • polyMesh/
    • other dictionaries
  • 0/ or another initial time directory
    • field files

Additional directories can be generated, depending on user selections. These may include:

  • result time directories: field predictions as a function of iteration count or time
  • postProcessing/: data typically generated by function objects data conversion, e.g. VTK

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Chen, Goong; Xiong, Qingang; Morris, Philip J.; Paterson, Eric G.; Sergeev, Alexey; Wang, Yi-Ching. "OpenFOAM for Computational Fluid Dynamics". Notices of the AMS. 61 (4).
  2. ^ "CFD Direct – The Architects of OpenFOAM". CFD Direct. Archived from the original on 27 March 2015.
  3. ^ "The open source CFD toolbox". OpenFOAM.
  4. ^ "Wikki Ltd – Consultancy and Software Development in Computational Fluid Dynamics".
  5. ^ a b "OpenFOAM launched 10th December 2004". OpenCFD Ltd. Archived from the original on 8 February 2005. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  6. ^ "OpenFOAM 12 Released | OpenFOAM Foundation | OpenFOAM". openfoam.org.
  7. ^ "OpenFOAM-v2312". Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  8. ^ Sajkowski, Michal (4 April 2023). "What is OpenFOAM?". SimFlow.
  9. ^ Jungle, Neon. "New research uses OpenFOAM to model multiple moored floating structures". CoreMarine. Retrieved 12 September 2024.
  10. ^ "Global brand database". World Intellectual Property Organisation. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  11. ^ Chen, Goong; Xiong, Qingang; Morris, Philip J.; Paterson, Eric G.; Sergeev, Alexey; Wang, Yi-Ching (2014). "OpenFOAM for Computational Fluid Dynamics". Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 61 (4): 354–363. doi:10.1090/noti1095.
  12. ^ "OpenFOAM". CFD-Online. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  13. ^ Greenshields, Chris (3 April 2016). "Release History". openfoam.org. Archived from the original on 29 July 2017.
  14. ^ "Wikki Ltd – About Us".
  15. ^ "OpenFOAM history repository". GitHub. 15 January 2019.
  16. ^ "OpenFOAM Foundation, Company History". openfoam.org. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
  17. ^ "Press Releases: SGI Acquires OpenCFD Ltd., the Leader in Open Source Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) Software". SGI. Archived from the original on 6 December 2012. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  18. ^ "Acquisition of OpenCFD Ltd., The leader in Open Source software in Computational Fluid Dynamics". ESI Group. 11 September 2012. Archived from the original on 6 December 2012. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  19. ^ "OpenFOAM". CFD Direct. 25 March 2015. Archived from the original on 29 March 2015.
  20. ^ "OpenFOAM Foundation: Release History". openfoam.org. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
  21. ^ "Release history". openfoam.com. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
  22. ^ "OpenFOAM Governance". OpenCFD Ltd. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  23. ^ "OpenFOAM Steering Committee". OpenCFD Ltd. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  24. ^ "OpenFOAM Technical Committees". OpenCFD Ltd. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  25. ^ "OpenFOAM: User Guide: Case structure".
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