PRESENTATION ON DESIGN AND
SIMULATION USING ANSYS WORK BENCH
BY
G RAKESH REDDY
16315A0340
What are the Different Ways to Validate any
design?
There are 3 Methods to Validate any Design:
1.Analytical Method
2.Numerical Method
3.Experimental Method.
Numerical Methods
There are total 4 Numerical Methods:
1.Finite Element Method (FEM) / Finite
Element Analysis (FEA)
2.Boundary Element Method (BEM)
3.Finite Volume Method (FVM)
4.Finite Difference Method (FDM)
What is FEM?
Finite
The Finite Element Method reduces the degrees of freedom
from infinite to finite with the help of discretization or
meshing (nodes and elements).
Element
The entity joining nodes and forming a specific shape such
as quadrilateral or triangular is known as an Element.
Method
There are 3 methods to solve any engineering problem. Finite element
analysis belongs to numerical metho catedgory.
What is CAE ?
Computer-aided engineering (CAE) is the broad usage of
computer software to aid in engineering analysis tasks. It
includes Finite Element Analysis (FEA), Computational Fluid
Dynamics (CFD), Multibody dynamics (MBD), Optimization, etc.
CAE Process
Pre-Processing Solver Post-Processing
Geometry
Meshing
Elements and Nodes View the Contor of Stress
Material /Displacement.
Property ANSYS
Loading Condition View the graphs
Type of Analysis
Design Modeller Mechanical
Mechanical
MESHING
1-D meshing
2-D Meshing
3-D Meshing
TYPES OF MESHING
Hex Meshing
SWEEP MESHING
MULTIZONE MESHING
TYPES OF 3 D ELEMENTS
TETRAHEDRONS METHOD
Patch Conforming
Bottom up approach: Meshing
process
Edges > Faces > volume
Patch Independent
Volume meshed first projected on to faces & edges
Patch Conforming Patch Independent
Static Structural Analysis
static structural analysis determines the
displacements, stresses, strains, and forces in
structures or components caused by loads that do
not induce significant inertia and damping effects.
Transient Structural Analysis
A transient analysis, by definition, involves loads that
are a function of time. In the Mechanical application,
you can perform a transient analysis on either a
flexible structure or a rigid assembly.
EIGENVALUE BUCKLING ANALYSIS
An Eigenvalue Buckling analysis predicts the
theoretical buckling strength of an ideal elastic
structure.
This method corresponds to the textbook approach
to an elastic buckling analysis.
For instance, an eigenvalue buckling analysis of a
column matches the classical Euler solution.
(a) Nonlinear load-deflection curve (b) Eigenvalue buckling curve.
EIGENVALUE BUCKLING ANALYSIS
Inertia Relief - Linear Static Structural Analyses Only
• IF THE INERTIAL RELIEF PROPERTY IS SET TO ON, THEN ANY ANALYSIS
LINKED TO THE STATIC STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS IS INVALID.
THIS INCLUDES A STATIC STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS LINKED TO THE FOLLOWING
ANALYSIS TYPES:
– PRE-STRESSED MODAL
– EIGENVALUE BUCKLING
– PRE-STRESSED FULL HARMONIC RESPONCE
Harmonic Response Analysis
Harmonic analyses are used to determine the steady-state
response of a linear structure to loads that vary sinusoidally
(harmonically) with time, thus enabling you to verify whether
or not your designs will successfully overcome resonance,
fatigue, and other harmful effects of forced vibrations.
Modal Analysis
A modal analysis determines the vibration characteristics
(natural frequencies and mode shapes) of a structure or a
machine component. It can also serve as a starting point for
another, more detailed, dynamic analysis, such as a transient
dynamic analysis, a harmonic analysis, or a spectrum analysis.
The natural frequencies and mode shapes are important
parameters in the design of a structure for dynamic loading
conditions. You can also perform a modal analysis on a pre-
stressed structure, such as a spinning turbine blade.
If there is damping in the structure or machine component, the
system becomes a damped modal analysis.
FATIGUE ANALYSIS
Fatigue Results
Fatigue provides life, damage, and factor of safety information and
uses a stress-life or strain-life approach, with several options for
handling mean stress and specifying loading conditions.
Common uses for the strain-life approach are in notched areas where,
although the nominal response is elastic, the local response may
become plastic.
The three components to a fatigue analysis are:
•Fatigue Material Properties
•Fatigue Analysis and Loading Options
•Reviewing Fatigue Results
Steady-State Thermal Analysis
steady-state thermal analysis is used to determine temperatures, thermal
gradients, heat flow rates, and heat fluxes in an object that are caused by
thermal loads that do not vary over time.
A steadystate thermal analysis calculates the effects of steady thermal loads
on a system or component.
Engineers often perform a steady-state analysis before performing a transient
thermal analysis, to help establish initial conditions.
A steady-state analysis also can be the last step of a transient thermal
analysis, performed after all transient effects have diminished.
Explicit dynamics analysis
An explicit dynamics analysis is used to determine the dynamic response of
a structure due to stress wave propagation, impact or rapidly changing time-
dependent loads.
Momentum exchange between moving bodies and inertial effects are
usually important aspects of the type of analysis being conducted.
Random Vibration Analysis
This analysis enables you to determine the response of structures to
vibration loads that are random in nature.
An example would be the response of a sensitive electronic component
mounted in a car subjected to the vibration from the engine, pavement
roughness, and acoustic pressure.
Transient Thermal Analysis
Transient thermal analyses determine temperatures and other thermal
quantities that vary over time.
The variation of temperature distribution over time is of interest in many
applications such as with cooling of electronic packages or a quenching
analysis for heat treatment.
Many heat transfer applications such as heat treatment problems,
electronic package design, nozzles, engine blocks, pressure vessels, fluid-
structure interaction problems, and so on involve transient thermal
analyses.
Response Spectrum Analysis
Response spectrum analyses are widely used in civil structure designs, for
example, high-rise buildings under wind loads.
Another prime application is for nuclear power plant designs under seismic
loads.
A Response Spectrum analysis has similarities to a Random Vibration
Analysis.
However, unlike a Random Vibration analysis, responses from a Response
Spectrum analysis are deterministic maxima.
What is CFD ?
computation Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is the science of predicting the
fluid flow, heat and mass transfer, chemical reaction, and related
phenomena.
To predict this phenomena, CFD solver equations for conservation of
mass, momentum, energy etc..
CFD is used in all stages of engineering process:
•Conceptual studies of new design
•Detailed product development
•Optimization
•Troubleshooting
•Redesign
THANK YOU