1 / 40

An Introduction to Finite Element Analysis with Pro/MECHANICA

An Introduction to Finite Element Analysis with Pro/MECHANICA. Stephen Seymour, P.E. Seymour Engineering & Consulting Group, LLC www.seymourecg.com. Presentation Outline. Introduction to Pro/Mechanica Capabilities and differences Cantilever beam demo Materials, loads, and constraints

yovela
Download Presentation

An Introduction to Finite Element Analysis with Pro/MECHANICA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Introduction to Finite Element Analysis with Pro/MECHANICA Stephen Seymour, P.E.Seymour Engineering & Consulting Group, LLC www.seymourecg.com

  2. Presentation Outline • Introduction to Pro/Mechanica • Capabilities and differences • Cantilever beam demo • Materials, loads, and constraints • Element types and meshing • Idealizations, connections, and contact • Analysis definition and convergence • Reviewing results

  3. What is Pro/Mechanica? • Pro/Mechanica is general finite element analysis (FEA) software tool that is directly integrated into Pro/Engineer • Pro/Mechanica (also referred to as Simulation) is generally classified as a structural and thermal Computer Aided Engineering (CAE) tool.

  4. Pro/Mechanica Capabilities • Static structural stress/strain/disp • Modal, prestressed modal, and mechanical vibration • Buckling • Non-linear contact / large deformation • Fatigue • Hyperelastic materials • Steady state thermal analysis • Transient thermal analysis

  5. How Does Pro/Mechanica Differ? • Pro/Mechanica is a linear P-element finite element solver • Most other commercial FEA packages are H-element codes • The difference: convergence method • P: varies element shape functions • H: mesh refinement

  6. How Does Pro/Mechanica Differ? • Pro/Mechanica by default is a linear finite element solver with some non-linear capabilities • Automated convergence via element shape function adaptation • Multi-pass adaptive (MPA) • Single pass adaptive (SPA)

  7. Analysis Methodology

  8. Cantilever Beam Demonstration • Goal: determine the maximum bending stresses

  9. Solution Comparison Analytical Solution • Analytical model based on classic beam theory for slender uniform cross section beams

  10. Solution Comparison Pro/Mechanica FEA Solution • Pro/Mechanica FEA results indicate maximum bending stress is approximately 6000 psi • Stress varies linearly along length of beam as expected

  11. Applying Material Properties Parts • Pro/Mechanica provides a default library of materials • Ability to create custom materials with descriptions • Be careful of units!

  12. Applying Material Properties Assemblies • Ability to assign different materials to different components • Material assignment can be performed at either assembly or individual part level • Material properties must be assigned before meshing

  13. Degrees of Freedom (DOF) • The primary 6 independent motions of any solid body. 3 translation and 3 rotation • All static structural FEA problems required no rigid motion, therefore after constraints (and idealizations) there must be no motion

  14. Displacement Constraints • Constraints can be defined on surfaces, edges, or points • Constraints can be free, fixed, or prescribed relative to the coordinate system selection • Constraint coordinate systems can be Cartesian, cylindrical, or spherical.

  15. Symmetry Constraints • The symmetry constraint will simulate a symmetry type boundary condition by constraining motion normal (perpendicular) to the selected surface • Should not be used with asymmetrical loading conditions • Should not be used with modal analyses

  16. Loads Forces and Moments • Most common of all load types • Can be applied on surfaces, edges, and points • Can reference user defined coordinate systems • Moments must be specified with the advanced option Total Load at Point

  17. Loads Other • Bearing loads • Centrifugal loads • Gravity loads • Pressure loads • Temperature loads • Thermal simulation result loads • Remember: gravity in the IPS unit system is 386.4 in/sec2

  18. Element Types Solid Elements • Tetrahedral shape • 3 translational DOFs at nodes • Rotational constraints not required • Shown in blue • Ideal for solid bodies with large cross-sectional areas • Not well suited for thin bodies

  19. Element Types Shell Elements • 2D or 3D triangles and quadrilaterals • 6 translational DOFs at nodes • Shown in green • Ideally suited for parts with thin cross-sections (i.e. tank walls, sheet metal components, etc.) • Non-linear contact not possible for this element type

  20. Element Types Beam Elements • 2D or 3D point-to-point or thru curve • 6 translational DOFs at nodes • Shown in light blue with cross-section (Shown here in red for clarity) • Well suited to represent beams with a 10:1 slenderness ratio

  21. Mesh • Meshing can be done either before or during analysis • The greater the # of elements…the longer the solution time • Mixed element meshes are possible • Convergence problems can typically be resolved by refinement in high gradient locations

  22. Mesh Controls • Control the density of elements within specific regions of the model • Can be applied on volumes, surfaces, and edges • Ability to specify regions of exclusion where singularities may exist

  23. Idealizations Masses • Mass idealizations (also known as mass elements) are attached to a single point (either datum or vertex) within your model • Mass idealizations by default are mass only with no inertia. However, an advanced mass element may also included mass moments of inertia (MMOI) to increase the accuracy of the solution • Be careful of mass unit!

  24. Idealizations Springs • Spring idealizations can simulate the behavior of real world springs in the model without having to solid model a spring • Spring idealizations can range from very simple extension only springs that are defined point-to-point….to complex springs that can have varying linear and torsional spring constants in all 6 degrees of freedom

  25. Connections • There are four main connection types: • Interface • Weld • Rigid link • Weighted link

  26. Connections Interface • Bonded • Merges coincident faces together for the analysis • Free interface • Allows coincident faces to act independently of one another • Contact • Interpenetration not allowed. Can be frictionless or infinite friction

  27. Connections Welds • Three main types of welds: • End weld • Perimeter weld • Spot weld • End and perimeter welding extend the base shell geometry • Spot welds are created using beams. May specify alternate material.

  28. Connections Rigid Link • Can be created to points, edges, curves, and surfaces • Couples the DOF • Features with rigid links cannot have localized displacements or rotations • Improper use of rigid links can adversely affect results

  29. Connections Weighted Link • Developed primarily for distributing mass or loads • Allow the attachment of mass idealizations without stiffening structure • Source point must be a datum point, target entities can be points, edges, or surfaces

  30. Analysis Definition • Once loads, constraints, and materials have been defined it is time to define the type of analysis to be performed • Choose from the drop down list the analysis type or study you wish to perform • Some analysis types may require additional licensing

  31. Analysis Definition • Analysis name entered will be subfolder name where files reside • Multiple load sets can be analyzed independently or summed. • Select the convergence method • Choose output options • Enable/Disable the exclusions of elements from the analysis

  32. Convergence Options • Multi-Pass Adaptive (MPA) • Polynomial order is repeatedly increased until specified convergence is obtained (default 10%) • Single Pass Adaptive (SPA) • First pass using order of 3. Second pass order is increased to a max of 9 in high stress gradient areas. • Quick check • Mechanica performs a single pass at a uniform polynomial order of 3.

  33. Convergence Options Multi-Pass Adaptive (MPA) • Percentage represents max allowable change from pass to pass • A poorly converged model is equal to pretty picture • Converged model doesn’t imply accurate solution • GIGO principle • Poor boundary conditions

  34. Reviewing Results Launch The Results Viewer • There are three options for viewing the completed results: • Select the analysis and choose the results icon • Start the results viewer from Pro/Mechanica or Pro/Engineer

  35. Reviewing Results Results Selection • Select from the drop down the result you wish to plot • Fringe is the default display type, but vector and graph plots are possible • P-level is a plot of the highest polynomial order used for each element throughout the domain

  36. Reviewing Results Results Display Location • Gives the option to plot results on specific geometric entities • For assemblies results may be plotted on certain components only or in exploded view

  37. Reviewing Results Results Display Options • Control color display and animation effects • Continuous tone creates smooth result plots, but requires more computing time and memory • To see the true deformation set the scaling to a value of 1 and uncheck the % box

  38. Results • Dynamical query results • Animate deformed shape • Create section planes • Customizable legend

  39. Conclusion • This completes the introduction to Finite Element Analysis (FEA) with Pro/Mechanica • Many more features available • Remember: always make sure your results make sense • GIGO principle

More Related