Two-dimensional There are two types of two-dimensional cell shapes that are commonly used. These are the
triangle and the
quadrilateral. Computationally poor elements will have sharp
internal angles or short edges or both.
Triangle This cell shape consists of 3 sides and is one of the simplest types of mesh. A triangular surface mesh is always quick and easy to create. It is most common in
unstructured grids.
Quadrilateral This cell shape is a basic 4 sided one as shown in the figure. It is most common in structured grids. Quadrilateral elements are usually excluded from being or becoming concave.
Three-dimensional The basic 3-dimensional element are the
tetrahedron,
quadrilateral pyramid,
triangular prism, and
hexahedron. They all have triangular and quadrilateral faces. Extruded 2-dimensional models may be represented entirely by the prisms and hexahedra as extruded triangles and quadrilaterals. In general, quadrilateral faces in 3-dimensions may not be perfectly planar. A nonplanar quadrilateral face can be considered a thin tetrahedral volume that is shared by two neighboring elements.
Tetrahedron A
tetrahedron has 4 vertices, 6 edges, and is bounded by 4 triangular faces. In most cases a tetrahedral volume mesh can be generated automatically.
Pyramid A quadrilaterally-based
pyramid has 5 vertices, 8 edges, bounded by 4 triangular and 1 quadrilateral face. These are effectively used as transition elements between square and triangular faced elements and other in hybrid meshes and grids.
Triangular prism A
triangular prism has 6 vertices, 9 edges, bounded by 2 triangular and 3 quadrilateral faces. The advantage with this type of layer is that it resolves boundary layer efficiently.
Hexahedron A
cuboid, a topological
cube, has 8 vertices, 12 edges, and 6 quadrilateral faces, making it a type of
hexahedron. In the context of meshes, a cuboid is often called a
hexahedron,
hex, or
brick. For the same cell amount, the accuracy of solutions in hexahedral meshes is the highest. The pyramid and triangular prism zones can be considered computationally as degenerate hexahedrons, where some edges have been reduced to zero. Other degenerate forms of a hexahedron may also be represented.
Advanced Cells (Polyhedron) A
polyhedron (dual) element has any number of vertices, edges and faces. It usually requires more computing operations per cell due to the number of neighbours (typically 10). Though this is made up for in the accuracy of the calculation. ==Classification of grids==