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We ask FLUENT to solve the axisymmetric form of the governing equations. When you do this, the solver switches to cylindrical polar coordinates. So from here on, you should interpret the horizontal coordinate as axial and the vertical coordinate as radial.
General > Solver > 2D Space > Axisymmetric

 
The energy equation is turned off by default. Turn on the energy equation. Note that in most cases, you'll have to double-click on an item to select it. 
Models > Energy - Off > Edit...
Turn on the Energy Equation and click OK.
 
By default, FLUENT will assume the flow is laminar. Let's tell it that our flow is turbulent rather than laminar and that we want to use the k-epsilon turbulence model to simulate our turbulent flow. This means FLUENT will solve for mean (i.e. Reynolds-averaged) values of velocity, pressure and temperature. It will add the k and epsilon equations to the set of governing equations to calculate the effect of the turbulent fluctuations on the mean, as discussed in the Pre-Analysis step.

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Change the Type to axis and click OK. FLUENT will set the flow gradients all radial derivatives at this boundary to zero in accordance with the axisymmetric assumption.

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Select:
Boundary Conditions > inlet
Note that the boundary Type is automatically set to velocity-inlet. FLUENT has an automatic mechanism to pick a boundary type according to the name you give and settings that you have selected previously (this could can be dangerous if FLUENT selects the wrong boundary type and a lackadaisical user doesn't change it). In this case, it gets it right.

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Enter -1112.3 for Gauge Pressure and click OK. (From experiment, measured outlet pressure is 97225.9 Pa. Corresponding gauge pressure = 97225.9 Pa - operating pressure = -1112.3 Pa.) The negative sign indicates that the pressure at the outlet is lower than the ambient value.  


Now FLUENT knows all necessary elements of our beloved BVP (domain, governing equations and boundary conditions). In the Solution step, we'll prod the beast to obtain an approximate numerical solution to our BVP.

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