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Create a new Material with Python bindings

asked 2023-11-01 12:54:20 -0600

clima337's avatar

updated 2023-11-01 14:24:51 -0600

Hello, I am looking to edit buildings by increasing the thermal insulation of walls. I think there are multiple ways to do this, including changing the thermal conductance of surfaces, but it seems like the best way is to edit the layered construction of the surface and add the insulation material. To do this, I am trying to create that material with code.

From the limited documentation I can see, something like this should work:

import openstudio as osm  
osm1 = 'osm_path' 
b1 = osm.model.Model.load(osm1).get() 
mat = osm.openstudiomodelresources.Material(b1) 
mat.setThickness(0.3)

However, this does not work. I get an error on the mat = osm. line like this:

TypeError: Wrong number or type of arguments for overloaded function 'new_Material'.
  Possible C/C++ prototypes are:
    openstudio::model::Material::Material(openstudio::model::Material const &)
    openstudio::model::Material::Material(openstudio::model::Material &&)

I cannot find any documentation on the proper way to instantiate an object of class Material (or any other class for that matter). Anyone know?

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answered 2023-11-06 02:36:59 -0600

Material is an abstract base class. You cannot instantiate it. You probably want StandardOpaqueMaterial since you mean to set a thickness (otherwise MasslessOpaqueMaterial is a possibility)

In [1]: import openstudio

In [2]: m = openstudio.model.Model()

In [3]: mat = openstudio.model.StandardOpaqueMaterial(m)

In [4]: mat.setThickness(0.3)
Out[4]: True

In [5]: print(mat)
OS:Material,
  {355d42fb-f0e5-4e57-b0e8-a8d34651f095}, !- Handle
  Material 1,                             !- Name
  Smooth,                                 !- Roughness
  0.3,                                    !- Thickness {m}
  0.1,                                    !- Conductivity {W/m-K}
  0.1,                                    !- Density {kg/m3}
  1400;                                   !- Specific Heat {J/kg-K}

Take a look at the inheritance diagram: https://s3.amazonaws.com/openstudio-s...

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Asked: 2023-11-01 12:54:20 -0600

Seen: 753 times

Last updated: Nov 06 '23