Do you have a favorite software package for finite element analysis?I need to look into different FEA packages for my company. Our primary interest would be seismic analysis of our filtration systems. We do air filtration systems for nuclear, biological, and industrial applications and have quite a few government contracts.So, basically, no moving parts, and fairly simple structural analysis, but as I said, we need to do seismic analysis.
3/14/2007 4:51:47 PM
only one i've ever used is ansys when i took finite... it seemed decently easy to work with.
3/14/2007 5:44:57 PM
From the mind of Dr. James Pearson... Ansys will be suitable for your companies needs. Ansys is not thecheapest software to license however; if you are an NCSU student youcan own a legitimate copy through EOS, for free, which will only runwith a NCSU login and an internet connection capable of finding theNCSU license server (this has the potential of saving the companymoney, I am positive a company license for 1 year for ANSYS ver 9.0 iswell over $20k). Sometimes, in my experience Ansys has not had themost satisfactory import abilities from CAD packages, so you may needto check on what software you currently use to model the filters. Iam sure if you guys paid for a company license, customer service wouldbe great. When you say seismic, here is what I see you guys doing: Inaerospace applications for crash/shock (aka seismic) loading, thenormal/easiest way companies proof parts is by 1st) Running asimulation using the part (filters) and 'normal expected use loads',then, 2) taking the 'normal expected use loads' on the part(filters) and just multiplying these by ~20, then run the simulationagain. This is easily and efficiently done in Ansys (as well as almost anyother FEA software, like Cosmo, Nike3d, Comsol (high power, easy touse, cheap, all around good [for instance, if you want to run acoupled field model, where you have actual water in a solid filtersubjected to a crash loading, this would be the easiest way to go -def. not ansys in this case*]), a TON of free codes from the DOE andSandia).* It is easy to include water in the model as a solid with someweight/density (perhaps doubled, to account for the approximation ofwater as a solid) This is a 'static' analysis. The only hard or tricky part in theseanalysis', to obtain reasonable results, is the application of the'boundary conditions'. True seismic loadings are dynamic and random vibe. Ansys can dothese analysis'. They have many more details to handle and theresults are harder to interpret. ESPECIALLY if you are running modelsin 3D. However, I highly doubt you people are trying to run dynamic(w/ wave effects) simulations on these systems. It is easy, in Ansys,to run a series of consecutive linked static loadings where over timeyou change the loadings to match some design requirement. These arequasi-static runs. When you seismic, you may mean vibrational modes and mode shapes.Everything (software) will give you this - it is much more laboriousin 3d. This is a standard component of any true seismic analysis.However the information supplied is not necessarily linked to failure,and most be analyzed first and then used second to generate loadingsfor a seperate model using the static technique.Big issues at the end of the day:1) What is you current CAD software and will it import2) Are the models in 2D or 3D3) Will you run static, quasi-static or true dynamic models4) Are you modelling fluids and solid structure together, ie FSI(fluid surface interaciton) - if so no Ansys!5) Almost everything will give you the vibrational modes and modeshapes for a solid structureANSYS will work well for solid models (no fluid), 2D (and 3D but otherprograms are better), static + quasi-static + dynamic (avoid ingeneral, except for vibrational mode analysis).
3/15/2007 9:03:29 AM
Ah. Lots of help. Wonderful.
3/15/2007 8:31:53 PM