Hello everyone,
I am running a transient CFD simulation of a propeller in SIMULIA / 3DEXPERIENCE Flow Solver (R2026x) using a sliding mesh rotating zone, and I am consistently encountering the following error:
Rotating zone has partial contact with its surrounding regions. Check the mesh at the interface.
Problem setup
- Geometry:
- Propeller inside a cylindrical rotating fluid zone
- Cylinder embedded inside a stationary outer bounding box
- Topology:
- One Rotating Zone Fluid (full cylinder volume)
- One Stationary Zone Fluid (entire bounding box minus cylinder)
- One Fluid-Fluid Interface between rotating and stationary regions
- Physics:
- Transient
- Sliding Mesh (not MRF)
- Turbulence: SST k-ω
- Boundaries:
- Propeller → Wall, no-slip, non-inertial
- Outer bounding box → Default Wall, slip
- Pressure outlet → 0 Pa gauge
- Mesh:
- Hex-dominant mesh
- Good skewness and angles
- Aspect ratio is high near boundary layers but solver accepts it
- Only a few cells flagged for “special treatment”
What I observe
- Simulation starts and sometimes advances 1 time increment
- Then stops with:
- Partial contact error on the rotating zone
- Partial contact error on the rotating zone
- Info messages show:
- “unintended non-axisymmetric surfaces”
- remaining faces assigned to Default Wall Boundary clones
- This happens even though:
- The rotating zone is a single closed cylinder
- The fluid interface is defined
- There are no gaps in geometry
- If I switch to MRF, the case runs without errors
Questions
- What exactly causes “partial contact with surrounding regions” in sliding-mesh cases?
- Does this error mean that some rotating-zone boundary faces are not included in the Fluid Interface, and if so, how can I reliably detect and fix them?
- Is it mandatory that 100% of the rotating zone boundary be paired through the Fluid Interface (no default wall faces at all)?
- Are high-aspect-ratio boundary-layer cells near the interface known to trigger this error?
- Is there a recommended best practice workflow (MRF → Sliding Mesh) to avoid this issue?
Any guidance or diagnostic tips would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you in advance.
