TAGGED: beams-and-shells, coupling, meshing, structural
-
-
February 17, 2022 at 5:21 pm
ccrook
SubscriberI have a geometry of thin beams and plates connected along the plate edges. My goal is to use shell (shell281) and beam (beam189) elements to model the geometry. However, the overlap of the beams and shells without any regard for the diameter of the beam leads to erroneous results. A simplified base example is shown below where the beam is exaggerated for clarity. The beam is too thin to reasonably mesh it as a solid. Therefore, I wanted to know if there were a way to couple the edge of a shell element to the surface of a beam element. Is this possible with some sort of bonded contact? My intended geometry is more complicated than below so ideally I'd like to avoid manually coupling nodes myself since the beam orientations is complex.
February 17, 2022 at 5:27 pmpeteroznewman
SubscriberWhat is the diameter of the beam and the thickness of the shell. If they are the same material and the dimensions are not so different, do you even need to model the beam?
February 18, 2022 at 5:23 amccrook
SubscriberThe diameter and thickness are sufficiently different that they needed to be modeled separately.
February 18, 2022 at 11:02 pmpeteroznewman
SubscriberTry using SpaceClaim. Create beam elements from lines and create surface bodies that intersect at the line. On the Workbench tab, click the Share button.
When you open this in Mechanical and mesh it, the beam elements and the shell elements will share common nodes at the intersection.
February 20, 2022 at 8:43 pmccrook
SubscriberApologies, I should have specified I am using Ansys Mechanical APDL. For other reasons, I won't discuss here, I am not using spaceclaim.
Viewing 4 reply threads- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Ansys Innovation SpaceBoost Ansys Fluent Simulations with AWS
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) helps engineers design products in which the flow of fluid components is a significant challenge. These different use cases often require large complex models to solve on a traditional workstation. Click here to join this event to learn how to leverage Ansys Fluids on the cloud, thanks to Ansys Gateway powered by AWS.
Earth Rescue – An Ansys Online Series
The climate crisis is here. But so is the human ingenuity to fight it. Earth Rescue reveals what visionary companies are doing today to engineer radical new ideas in the fight against climate change. Click here to watch the first episode.
Ansys Blog
Subscribe to the Ansys Blog to get great new content about the power of simulation delivered right to your email on a weekly basis. With content from Ansys experts, partners and customers you will learn about product development advances, thought leadership and trends and tips to better use Ansys tools. Sign up here.
Trending discussions- Saving & sharing of Working project files in .wbpz format
- Solver Pivot Warning in Beam Element Model
- Understanding Force Convergence Solution Output
- An Unknown error occurred during solution. Check the Solver Output…..
- What is the difference between bonded contact region and fixed joint
- whether have the difference between using contact and target bodies
- The solver engine was unable to converge on a solution for the nonlinear problem as constrained.
- User manual
- Colors and Mesh Display
- material damping and modal analysis
Top Contributors-
3812
-
2607
-
1853
-
1244
-
600
Top Rated Tags© 2023 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.
Ansys does not support the usage of unauthorized Ansys software. Please visit www.ansys.com to obtain an official distribution.
-