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Customer Training Material

L t
Lecture
2
Mechanical Basics

Introduction to ANSYS
Mechanical
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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Chapter Overview

In this chapter, the basics of using Mechanical to perform analyses


will be covered, which include:
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.

Customer Training Material

The Mechanical Interface


Introduction to the Mechanical Application Wizard
Basic Analysis Procedure
Applying Loads and Supports
Graphics Control and Selection
The Engineering Data application
Workshop 2-1

The capabilities described in this section are generally applicable to


the ANSYS DesignSpace Entra licenses and above, unless noted.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Launching Mechanical

Customer Training Material

Recall that there are two ways of running Mechanical:


Configured from within ANSYS Workbench

or from a supported CAD system

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

A. The Mechanical Interface

Customer Training Material

The components of the user interface are shown below:


Toolbars

Menus

Graphics Window

Tree Outline

Details View

Mechanical
Application Wizard

Message Window

Status Bar
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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Menus

Customer Training Material

The menus provide much of the functionality present in Mechanical.


The more commonly used menu items are covered below:

The title bar lists analysis type, product and active ANSYS license.
View controls various graphics options, legend and toolbars.
Units to change units on-the-fly.
Tools > Options to customize settings and options.
Help > Mechanical Help to access documentation.

Analysis Type

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Product

License

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Toolbars

Customer Training Material

There are a number of toolbars to provide users quick access to


functionality also found in the menus.

The toolbars can be repositioned anywhere on the top of the Mechanical


window.
The Context toolbar, as will be illustrated later, updates depending on
what branch is active in the Outline
Outline tree.
Tooltips appear if the cursor is placed over the toolbar button.

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Toolbars

Customer Training Material

The Standard toolbar is shown below:


Bring up Mechanical Wizard

Annotations

Comments

Capture Snapshot
Solve Model

Slice Planes

The Graphics toolbar is used for selection and graphics


manipulation:

Select mode

Selection Tools

Graphics Manipulation

Viewports

The left mouse button can be either in selection mode or graphics


manipulation mode. The above toolbar buttons are grouped as select
entities and graphics manipulation control.
The graphics selection can be done using individual selection or boxselection. This is controlled by the Select Mode icon.
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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Outline Tree

Customer Training Material

The Outline Tree provides an easy way of


organizing the model, materials, mesh,
loads, and results for the analysis:
The Model branch contains the input
data required for the analysis.
The environment branch (in this case Static
Structural) contains the loads and supports
relevant to the analysis discipline.
The Solution branch contains result
objects and solution information.
information
Other branches (not covered here)
are also available.

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Outline Tree

Customer Training Material

The Outline Tree shows icons for each branch, along with a status
symbol. Examples of the status symbols are below:

Checkmark indicates branch is fully defined/OK


Question mark indicates item has incomplete data (need input)
Lightning
g
g bolt indicates solving
g is required
Exclamation mark means problem exists
X means that item is suppressed (will not be solved)
Transparent
p
checkmark means body
y or part
p
is hidden
Green lightning bolt indicates item is currently being evaluated
Minus sign means that mapped face meshing failed
Check mark with a slash indicates a meshed part/body
p
y
Red lightning bolt indicates a failed solution
Becoming familiar with the basic status symbols allows users to debug
Mechanical problems quickly.

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Details View

Customer Training Material

The Details View contains data input and output fields. The contents
will change depending on branch selected.
White field: input data
Data in white text field is editable

Gray (or Red) field: information


Data in gray fields cannot be modified.

Yellow field: incomplete input data


Data in yellow fields indicates missing information.

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Graphics Window

Customer Training Material

The Graphics Window shows the geometry and results. Tabs allow
access to Print and Report Previews as well.

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Worksheet View

Customer Training Material

Worksheet views are available for many objects in the tree (i.e.
geometry, connections, etc.).
Provides a list view of the data in the tree.
Activate
Worksheet

Toggle between
graphics and
worksheet
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B. The Mechanical Application Wizard

Customer Training Material

The Mechanical Wizard is an optional


component, a useful aid to remind users steps
required to complete an analysis
The Mechanical Wizard provides a list of
required steps and the status of them.
Green checkmark indicates the item is complete.
Green i shows an informational item.
A grayed symbol shows that the step cannot be
performed yet.
A red q
question
estion mark means that there is an
incomplete item.
An x means that the item is not performed yet
A lightning bolt means that the item is ready to
be solved or updated.

The options on the Mechanical Wizard menu


will change depending on the analysis type
chosen.
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. . . Mechanical Application Wizard

Customer Training Material

By selecting an item on the Required Steps checklist, a callout appears,


illustrating how that function is performed.
In the example below, Verify Materials was selected, and the callout shows the
user where this item can be changed
changed.

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Mechanical Application Wizard

Customer Training Material

The Mechanical Wizard is handy for


users who do not use Mechanical
every day.
Besides basic functionality, callouts
for more advanced items are also
available as shown on right.

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C. Basic Analysis Procedure

Customer Training Material

The purpose of analysis is usually to determine the response of a


system based on some type of excitation or loading.
It is crucial to remember that a mathematical model is used:
CAD geometry is an idealization of the physical model
The mesh is a mathematical representation of the CAD model
The accuracy
y of answers is determined by
y various factors:
How well the physical model is represented depends on the assumptions
Numerical accuracy is determined by the mesh density

CAD Model
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Finite Element Mesh


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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Basic Analysis Procedure

Customer Training Material

Every analysis involves four main steps:


Preliminary Decisions
What type of analysis: Static, modal, etc.?
What to model: Part or Assembly?
Which elements: Surface or Solid Bodies?

Preliminary
D i i
Decisions

Preprocessing

Attach
Att
h th
the model
d l geometry
t
Define and assign material properties to parts
Mesh the geometry
Apply loads and supports
Request results

Solve the Model


Postprocessing
p
g
Review results
Check the validity of the solution

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Preprocessing

Solution

Postprocessing

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D. Applying Loads & Supports

Customer Training Material

Loads and supports are applied on geometric entities in two different ways:
Pre-select geometry entity in Graphics Window, then select load or support from
Context Toolbar

Or, select load or support from Context Toolbar then select geometry entities in
Graphics Window, then click on Apply in Details View.

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Applying Loads & Supports

Customer Training Material

After assigning the load the user can enter additional data in the Details view,
if necessary.
Notice that in the Outline Tree the associated loads branch symbol status will also
g to completed (checkmark).
(
)
change

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Applying Loads & Supports

Customer Training Material

For some structural loads direction is


needed:
If Components is chosen, enter X, Y, or Z
C
Components
t off lloading
di
If Vector is chosen, select geometry and
enter magnitude of loading
Defaults can be set in Tools > Options
p

> Mechanical: Miscellaneous


> Load Orientation Type

The Global Coordinate System or user


defined local coordinate systems can be
referenced
User-Defined Coordinate Systems will be
discussed later

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Applying Loads & Supports

Customer Training Material

Existing geometry can be referenced to


control direction:
In the Details view, select Define By:
V t
Vector
Three types of existing geometry can be used
Normal to planar face or along axis of cylindrical
face
Along straight edge or normal to cylindrical edge
Two vertices defining vector

Click on Direction and select geometry used


for vector orientation. Use the arrows in the
Graphics window to toggle the direction.
Click on Apply when finished.
Enter magnitude for loading in Magnitude.

Toggle arrow buttons to


reverse load direction
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E. Graphics Control and Selection

Customer Training Material

The left mouse button is used to select geometric entities OR to


manipulate the graphics display

User can select items (vertex, edge, surface, body) or manipulate the view
(rotate, pan, zoom in/out, box zoom)
Select
S l t mode
d can be
b single-select
i l
l t or box-select
b
l t
In single-select mode, click-drag with left mouse
button to paint select multiple items
Use Ctrl-Left mouse button in single-select
g
mode to select or unselect multiple
p
entities
In box-select mode, click-drag from left to right selects entities fully enclosed in
bounding box
In box-select mode,, click-drag
g from right
g to left selects any
y entity
y partially
p
y enclosed in
bounding box

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Graphics Control and Selection

Customer Training Material

In select mode the middle mouse provides several short cuts for graphics
manipulation

Click + drag middle mouse button = dynamic rotate


CTRL+ Middle mouse button = dynamic pan
S f + Middle mouse button = dynamic zoom
Shift
If present, the wheel can be used to zoom in/out
RMB + drag = box zoom
Click right mouse button once and select Fit to fit model in view or access
context menu options

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Graphics Control and Selection

Customer Training Material

Selection planes allow for users to easily select surfaces which are hidden
from view by other surfaces.
User selects a plane; if more planes lie directly underneath the cursor, selection
planes appear. Selection planes are color-coded with the same color as its parent
part and are ordered by depth from the cursor.

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F. The Engineering Data Application

Customer Training Material

The Engineering Data application provides overall control for material


properties.
Engineering data is a part of every project.
Engineering data can be opened stand alone (as a precursor to starting
a project for example).

To open
p the Engineering
g
g Data
standalone, add from the
component systems in the toolbox
(drag/drop or double click), then
RMB > Edit or double click.

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To edit the Engineering


Data in an existing
project RMB > Edit or
double click

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. . . The Engineering Data Application

Customer Training Material

The Engineering Data application is displayed below. Individual


controls and components are described next.

Data Sources
Property Table

Toolbox
Individual Materials
Property
Chart
Material Properties

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. . . The Engineering Data Application

Customer Training Material

The 2 icons in the toolbar control the basic


display of engineering data.
The first toggles a filter for the materials
shown in the toolbox:
ON = only materials relevant to the current
analysis types are displayed.
OFF = all material properties are displayed.

The second toggles the display of either the


project materials or the data source materials:
ON: data sources (libraries) are displayed.
OFF: materials for the current project are
displayed.
displayed

Data Source/Project
Display

Physics Filter for Toolbox

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. . . The Engineering Data Application

Customer Training Material

With data sources displayed the windows provide a cascading data presentation.
To view or modify materials one generally follows a work flow shown here:
Data Source > Material > Property

Choose Data Source


(Library)
p y Property
p y
Display
in tabular and
graphical format

Choose Material

Choose Property

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. . . The Engineering Data Application


Data Sources

Customer Training Material

Check box allows library to be


unlocked for editing. Libraries must
be unlocked before materials can be
modified
modified.

The Favorites field represents the


materials which will be available in every
project.
j

The list of available material


libraries is displayed here.
These may be ANSYS
supplied or user defined.

Browse for existing


libraries or choose new
library location.

New user material libraries may be added


by entering a name and a location.

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. . . The Engineering Data Application

Customer Training Material

To add a material from an existing library to the current project click the
plus sign (+) next to that material.

Highlight the desired library

Click the + next to the


desired material

Materials can be made available for all projects


by designating them as Favorites
Favorites using RMB
IMPORTANT!: A material that is not displayed in the current
engineering data will not be available in the current analysis.
= OFF
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. . . The Engineering Data Application


To create a new material toggle
to the project materials display.
Enter a name, and description if
d i d for
desired,
f the
th new material.
t i l

Customer Training Material

= OFF

From the Toolbox


double click or drag
and drop the desired
properties.
Finally enter values for
the properties.
Note: properties can be
added to existing
materials using the
same technique.
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. . . The Engineering Data Application

Customer Training Material

Units menu in Engineering Data:


You may choose to display Values as Defined
or Values in Project Units.
As Defined units are controlled individually.

Project Units are taken


from the current Units menu
selection.

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G. Workshop 2-1 Mechanical Basics

Customer Training Material

Workshop 2.1 Mechanical Basics


Goal:
Using the Stress Wizard, set up and solve a structural model for
stress, deflection and safety factor.

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L t
Lecture
3
General Preprocessing
p
g

Introduction to ANSYS
Mechanical
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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Chapter Overview

In this chapter, using features without the use of the Wizards will be
covered
Topics:
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.

Customer Training Material

Geometry
Contact
Coordinate Systems
y
Named Selections
Workshop 3-1, Contact Control

The capabilities described in this section are generally applicable to


the ANSYS DesignSpace Entra licenses and above and are noted in
the lower-left hand tables

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Introduction

Customer Training Material

The Outline Tree is the main way of setting up an analysis


The Context Toolbar, Details View, and Graphics Window update,
depending on which Outline Tree branch is selected
Use of the Outline Tree will be emphasized in this chapter

U off th
Use
the O
Outline
tli Tree
T
is
i
the means by which
users navigate through
the Mechanical GUI.

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A. Geometry Branch

Customer Training Material

The Geometry branch lists the part(s)


that make up the model.
In Mechanical, there are three types of
bodies which can be analyzed:
Solid bodies are general 3D or 2D
volumes/areas/parts
Surface bodies are only areas
Line bodies are only curves
Each is explained next . . .

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Types of Bodies

Customer Training Material

Solid bodies are geometrically and spatially 3D or 2D:


3D solids are meshed with higher-order tetrahedral or hexahedral solid elements
with quadratic shape functions.
2D solids are meshed with higher order triangle or quadrilateral solid elements
with quadratic shape functions
The 2D switch must be set on the Project page prior to import
Geometry type cannot be changed from 2D to 3D (or vice versa) after import

Each node has three translational degrees of freedom (DOF) for structural or one
temperature DOF for thermal

3D Solids
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2D Solids
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y
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Types of Bodies

Customer Training Material

Surface bodies are geometrically 2D but spatially 3D:


Surface bodies represent structures which are thin in one dimension (throughthickness). Thickness is not modeled but supplied as an input value.
Surface bodies are meshed with linear shell elements having six DOF (UX,
(UX UY,
UY
UZ, ROTX, ROTY, ROTZ).

Line bodies are geometrically 1D but spatially 3D:


Line bodies represent
p
structures which are thin in two dimensions. The crosssection is not modeled.
Line bodies are modeled with linear beam elements having six DOF (UX, UY, UZ,
ROTX, ROTY, ROTZ).

Line Body

Surface Body
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Multibody Parts

Customer Training Material

In general, bodies and parts are the same. In DesignModeler however,


multiple bodies may be grouped into multibody parts.
Multibody parts share common boundaries so nodes are shared at that
interface.
No contact is needed in these situations.

Example:

Common nodes
are shared by
adjacent bodies

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Material Properties

Customer Training Material

To assign material properties to a body


highlight it and select from the available
properties in the Assignment field :
The only materials appearing in the list
will be materials added using the
Engineering Data application (see
chapter 2)
2).

For surface bodies a thickness needs to


be supplied as well.

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Geometry Worksheet

Customer Training Material

A summary of bodies and assigned materials is available.


Select Geometry branch and toggle the Worksheet icon.
Toggle between graphics or worksheet via tabs at bottom

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B. Contact

Customer Training Material

When multiple parts are present, a means of defining the relationship


between parts is needed.
Contact regions define how parts interact with each other.

Without
With t contact
t t or spott welds,
ld parts
t will
ill nott interact
i t
t with
ith each
h other:
th
In structural analyses, contact and spot welds prevent parts from penetrating
through each other and provide a means of load transfer between parts.
In thermal analyses,
y
, contact and spot
p welds allow for heat transfer across parts.
p
Multibody parts do not require contact or spot welds.

Load

Surface contact elements can be visualized as a skin


covering the regions where contact will occur.
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Contact

Customer Training Material

When an assembly is imported contact


surfaces are automatically detected
and created:
The p
proximity
y of surfaces is used to
detect contact. Tolerance for contact
detection is available in the
Connections branch details.

Contact is also used for 2D geometry.


g
y
Contact surfaces are represented by
edges.
Certain license levels allow surface to
edge, edge to edge and mixed
solid/surface contact.

Note, automatic contact should always


be checked and verified before
proceeding with an analysis.
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Contact

Customer Training Material

Connections can be grouped for convenient contact management.


In the example shown, contact has been grouped relative to various
sub assemblies in the model.
Contact can be auto defined for each group via RMB.

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Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

Contact elements provide the relationship between parts.


Each part maintains a separate mesh. This means that one small part will not
drive mesh density of the entire assembly and/or the user can make parts of
interest have a finer mesh than other parts

Note the non-matching mesh at the


interface between parts.
p
Mix of hexahedral elements
contacting tetrahedral elements is
possible.

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Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

When a contact region is highlighted in the connections branch, parts are made
translucent for easier viewing.
Selecting a contact region makes non participating bodies translucent.
Contact surfaces are color coded for easy
y identification.

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Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

Go To utilities allow a more detailed investigation of contact definitions:

Corresponding bodies in tree


Bodies without contact
Parts without contact
Contact regions for selected bodies
Contacts common to selected bodies

Contacts can be q
quickly
y renamed to match part
p
names

RMB
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Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

To manually define a contact pair insert a manual contact region and select
and apply contact and target surfaces.

RMB

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Advanced Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

For ANSYS Professional licenses and above,


advanced contact options are available:
Auto detection dimension and slider
Pinball
Pi b ll control
t l
Asymmetric contact, contact results tool and
additional formulations will be covered in a later
chapter.

Details for Connections

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Details for Contact Regions

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Advanced Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

The Pinball region represents a contact detection zone:


Contact open status is determined by the pinball radius.
Outside pinball: far field
pinball (not
(
touching):
g) near field
Inside p

Closed status is either sliding or sticking.


The pinball radius may be entered so that bonded contact
is used in gaps.
Pinball radius is displayed as a sphere in the graphics
window.

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Surface Body Contact

Customer Training Material

Shell contact includes edge-to-face or edge-to-edge


contact:
Shell contact is not turned on by
y default.
User can turn on detection of face-to-edge or edge-to-edge
contact.
Priority can be set to prevent multiple contact regions in a
given region.
region

Ed to
Edge
t Surface
S f

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Edge to Edge

Edge to Surface

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. . . Mesh Connections

Customer Training Material

Mesh connections can be used to joint surface


bodies at the mesh that do not share topology.
Must be a multibody part (DM).
Can include gaps/penetration.
Can use automatic or manual creation.

For manual definition:


Master geometry can be faces
or edges.
Slave geometry can only be
edges
edges.

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Spot Weld

Customer Training Material

Spot welds provide a means of connecting assemblies at discrete points:


Spot weld is defined in the CAD software. Currently, only DesignModeler and
Unigraphics define spot welds supported by Mechanical.

Spot weld pairs

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Contact Worksheet

Customer Training Material

The Worksheet for the Connections branch provides a summary of


various contact and spot weld definitions:

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C. Coordinate Systems

Customer Training Material

The Coordinate Systems branch initially contains only the global Cartesian
system.
Coordinate systems can be used for mesh controls, point masses,
di
directional
ti
l lloads,
d and
d results.
lt
Local Coordinate Systems can be created or imported from some CAD systems
(see Mechanical documentation).

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Coordinate Systems

Customer Training Material

Coordinate Systems (Cartesian or cylindrical) can be


defined by selecting Coordinate System icon from the
Context toolbar.
The
Th CS ttoolbar
lb becomes
b
available
il bl after
ft CS is
i defined.
d fi d
Delete
Translate

Rotate

Flip

Move Up/Down

Local coordinate systems are defined either by:


S
Selecting
l ti geometry
t (Associative
(A
i ti Coordinate
C
di t System).
S t ) The
Th
coordinate system updates if the geometrys location is
updated (not during solution). Its translation and rotation
are geometry dependent.
Specifying coordinates (Non-Associative Coordinate
System). The coordinate system will remain as originally
defined i.e.: it is independent of geometry.

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Coordinate Systems

Customer Training Material

Coordinate systems can be used from pull-down menus in the Details


view in various applications (examples below) :

Directional Results

Point Masses

Sizing w/ Sphere of
Influence Option

Directional Loads
Directional Displacements

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D. Named Selections

Customer Training Material

The Named Selection Toolbar provides functionality for grouping together


geometric entities:
Manipulate

Create

Show/Hide

Suppress/Unsuppress

Defined Names

Named Selections allow users to group together vertices, edges, surfaces, or


bodies.
Named Selections can be used for defining mesh controls,
controls applying loads and
supports, etc.
Provides an easy method to reselect groups that will be referenced often
Defining contact regions
Scoping
S
i results
lt
Etc.

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Defining Named Selections

Customer Training Material

To create Selections using geometry selection:


Select the vertices, edges, surfaces, or bodies of interest,
then click on the Create Selection Group icon.
Enter a name in the dialog box.
box
The new group will appear in the Named Selection
Toolbar as well as in the Outline Tree.
Note:
Only one type of entity can be in a particular
Named Selection. For example, vertices and
edges cannot exist in the same Named Selection.
Named Selection groups can be imported from
some CAD systems (see Chapter 10).

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Defining Named Selections

Customer Training Material

Selections can be created employing various criteria using the


Worksheet method.
Add, remove, filter, etc. to stack criteria for complex selections.
Each selection is generated to complete the operation.

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Defining Named Selections

Customer Training Material

Example, select a vertex at x,y,z = 97.7, 33, 0:


Using three operations (add, filter, remove),
allows a single vertex selection.

Results in 4 vertices selected

Results in 2 vertices selected

Results in 1 vertex selected

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Using Named Selections

Customer Training Material

In many detail window fields Named Selections can be referenced


directly:
Example (pressure load):
In the Details view, change Method

from
f
Geometry
G
Selection
S
to Named

Selection
Select the Named Selection from the pull-down menu
Mechanical will filter non-applicable
pp
types
yp of Named Selections.

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Using Named Selections

Customer Training Material

Named Selections can be used in other situations where geometry must


be picked:
Select Geometry from the Details view to enter picking mode
Toggle
T
l the
th Named
N
d Selection
S l ti
to
t select
l t from
f
the
th Toolbar
T lb
Select the applicable choice:
Select Items in Group, Add to Current Selection, Remove from Current Selection

Then,, click on Apply


pp y in the Details view

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E. Workshop 3.1 Contact Control

Customer Training Material

Workshop 3.1 Contact Control


Goal:
Investigate several types of contact behavior.

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L t
Lecture
4
Meshing
g in Mechanical

Introduction to ANSYS
Mechanical
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Chapter Overview

In this chapter controlling meshing operations is described.


Topics:
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.

Customer Training Material

Global Meshing
g Controls
Local Meshing Controls
Meshing Troubleshooting
Virtual Topology
p gy
Workshop 4-1, Meshing Control

The capabilities described in this section are generally applicable to


the ANSYS DesignSpace Entra licenses and above and are noted in
the lower-left
lower left hand tables

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Meshing in Mechanical

Customer Training Material

The nodes and elements representing the geometry model make up the
mesh:
A default mesh is automatically generated during initiation of the solution.
The
Th user can generate

t the
th mesh
h prior
i to
t solving
l i to
t verify
if mesh
h control
t l
settings.
A finer mesh produces more precise answers but also increases CPU time and
memory requirements.

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A. Global Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Physics Based Meshing allows the user to specify


the mesh based on the physics to be solved.
Choosing the physics type will set controls such
as:
Solid element mid-side nodes
Element shape checking
Transitioning

Physics preferences can be:

Mechanical
Electromagnetics
g
CFD
Explicit

Note: Some mesh controls are intended for nonMechanical applications (CFD, EMAG, etc). Only
mechanical mesh controls are discussed in this
course
course.
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Global Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Basic meshing controls are available under the Defaults group in the
Mesh branch
The user has control with a single slider bar
Relevance setting
g between 100 and +100

+ Relevance = fine
mesh

- Relevance = coarse
mesh

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Global Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Sizing Section:
The controls in this group set the basic
size defaults for the initial mesh. Local
controls (described later), can be used to
override these values in specific regions of
the model.
These
Th
settings
tti
assume the
th Use
U Advanced
Ad
d
Size Function is set to Off.
Relevance Center: sets the mid point of the Relevance slider control.
Element Size: defines element size used for the entire model
model.
Initial Size seed: Initial mesh size is based either on the entire assembly or on
each individual part.
Smoothing: Attempts to improve element quality by moving nodes. Number of
smoothing iterations can be controlled (Lo
(Low, Medi
Medium,
m High)
High).
Transition: Controls the rate at which adjacent elements will grow (Slow, Fast)

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Global Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Advanced Size Functions: 4 settings to control basic mesh sizing.


Curvature: The curvature size function examines curvature on edges and
faces and sets element sizes so as not to violate the maximum size or the
curvature
t
angle
l (automatically
( t
ti ll computed
t d or d
defined
fi d b
by th
the user).
)
Proximity: The proximity size function
allows you to specify the minimum
number of element layers created in
regions that constitute gaps in the model
(features).
Fixed: The fixed size function does not
refine the mesh based on curvature or
proximity. Rather, you specify minimum
and maximum sizes and gradation is
provided between sizes based on a
specified growth rate.
Note: users may accept default settings
for these options or specify their own
(described next).
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Global Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Curvature settings:
Normal angle: the maximum allowable angle that one element edge is allowed
to span (default based on relevance and span angle center settings).
Min Size: the minimum element edge size that the mesher will create.
Max Face Size: Maximum size the surface mesher will allow.
Max Size: Maximum size the volume mesher will allow.
Growth Rate: Specifies the increase in element size for each succeeding layer
progressing from an edge. A value of 1.2 represents a 20% increase. Settings
from 1 to 5 with a default determined by relevance and transition settings.

Curvature = 20 deg.
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Global Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Proximity Settings:
Proximity Accuracy: Set between 0 and 1 (0.5=default). Controls the search
range used with the max size and cells across gap settings. A setting of 0 is
f t a setting
faster,
tti off 1 is
i more accurate.
t
Num Cells Across Gap: specifies the number of element layers to be
generated in the gap sections (i.e. between features).

Num Cells = 2
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Global Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Shape Checking:
Standard Mechanical linear stress, modal
and thermal analyses.
Aggressive
gg
Mechanical large
g
deformations and material nonlinearities.

Element Midside Nodes:


Program Controlled (default), Dropped or
Kept (see below).

Number of Retries: if poor quality elements


are detected the mesher will retry using a
finer mesh.
Mesh Morphing: when enabled allows updated geometry to use a
morphed mesh rather than remeshing (saves time). Topology must
remain the same and large geometry changes cannot be morphed.

Element A

Element B

Kept
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Dropped
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B. Local Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Local Mesh Controls can be applied to either a Geometry Selection or a


Named Selection. These are available only when the mesh branch is
highlighted. Available controls include :

Method Control
Sizing Control
Contact Sizing Control
Refinement Control
Mapped Face Meshing
Match Control
Inflation Control
Pinch Control
Gap Tool (EMAG only, not covered)

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Local Meshing Controls : Method (continued)

Customer Training Material

Method Control : Provides the user with options as


to how solid bodies are meshed:
Automatic (default):
B
Body
d will
ill be
b sweptt if possible.
ibl Otherwise,
Oth
i
the
th
Patch Conforming mesher under Tetrahedrons
is used.

Continued . . .

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Local Meshing Controls : Method (continued)

Customer Training Material

Tetrahedrons:
An all Tetrahedron mesh is generated.
Patch Conforming:
All face boundaries are respected when mesh is created.

Patch Independent Meshing:


Faces and their boundaries may or may not be respected during meshing
operations.
The exception is when a boundary condition is applied to a surface, its
boundaries are respected.

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Local Meshing Controls : Method (continued)

Customer Training Material

Hex Dominant : Creates a free hex dominant mesh.


Useful for meshing bodies that cannot be swept.
Recommended for meshing
g bodies with large
g interior
volumes.
Not recommended for thin or highly complex shapes.
Free Face Mesh Type: determines the mesh shape
to be used to fill the body (Quad/Tri or All Quad).

Solid Model with Hex dominant


mesh :
Tetrahedrons 443 (9%)
Hexahedron 2801(62%)
Wedge 124 (2%)
Pyramid 1107 (24%)

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Local Meshing Controls : Method (continued)

Customer Training Material

Sweep :
Sweep-mesh (hex and possible wedge) elements.
Type : Number of Divisions or Element Size in the sweep direction.
Sweep Bias Type : Bias spacing in sweep direction
direction.
Src/Trg Selection : Manually select the start/end faces for sweeping or allow the
mesher to choose.
Automatic/Manual Thin Model One hex or wedge through the thickness. Can
choose between Solid Shell (SOLSH190) element and a Solid element (Solid185)
(Solid185).
A solid shell element is useful for thin structures with a single element through the
thickness (e.g. sheet metal).

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Local Meshing Controls : Method (continued)

Customer Training Material

MultiZone Method:
A patch independent mesher that automatically decomposes solid
geometry to accomplish sweep meshing (like a user might slice a model
f meshing).
for
hi )

Mapped Mesh Type: controls the shapes


used for fill regions.
Free Mesh Type: if set, allows tet meshes
in the fill regions. Can set to not allowed
if all hex is desired.
Standard Free Mesh

MultiZone Mesh
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Local Meshing Controls

Customer Training Material

Sizing:
Element Size specifies average element
edge length or number of divisions
( h i
(choices
depend
d
d on geometry
t selection).
l ti )
Soft control may be overridden by other
mesh controls. Hard may not.
Mesh biasing is available.
available

Sphere of Influence sizing, see next page.

Entity
Bodies
Faces
Edges
Vertices

Element Size
x
x
x

# of Elem. Division

Sphere of Influence
x
x
x
x

Size controls available based on geometry entity


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Face Sizing Applied to a


part.
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Local Mesh Controls

Customer Training Material

Sphere of Influence:
Center is located using local coordinate system.
All scoped entities within the sphere are affected by size settings.

Scoped to single vertex

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Sphere of Influence
(shown in red) has been
defined Elements lying in
defined.
that sphere for that scoped
entity will have a given
average element size.

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Scoped
p to 2 surfaces

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Local Mesh Controls

Customer Training Material

Contact Sizing: generates similar-sized elements on


contact faces for face/face or face/edge contact region.
Element Size or Relevance can be specified.
Choose
Ch
C
Contact
t t Si
Sizing
i ffrom th
the M
Mesh
hC
Control
t l menu and
d
specify the contact region.
Or drag and drop a Contact Region object onto the Mesh
object.

In this example, the contact


region between the two parts
h a Contact
has
C t t Sizing
Si i
Type
T
Relevance is specified. Note
that the mesh is now
consistent at the contact
region.

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Local Mesh Controls

Customer Training Material

Element refinement divides existing mesh


An initial mesh is created with global and local size controls first, then element
refinement is performed at the specified location(s).
Refinement range is 1 to 3 (minimum to maximum). Refinement splits the edges of
the elements in the initial mesh in half. Refinement level controls the number of
iterations this is performed.

For example shown, the left side has


refinement level of 2 whereas the right
side is left untouched with default
mesh settings.

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Local Mesh Controls

Customer Training Material

Mapped Face Meshing: generates structured meshes on


surfaces:
In example below, mapped face meshing on the
outer face provides a more uniform mesh pattern
pattern.

Mapped quad or tri mesh also available for surface bodies.


See next slide for advanced options . . . .

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Local Mesh Controls

Customer Training Material

For some geometry mapping will fail if an obvious pattern is not recognized.
By specifying side, corner or end vertices a mapped face can be achieved.

By setting side and end vertices


the mapped mesh succeeds
resulting in a uniform sweep.

Original mapping failed


as indicated next to the
mesh control.
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Local Mesh Controls

Customer Training Material

Inflation Control: useful for adding layers of elements along specific


boundaries.

Note: Inflation is more often used in CFD and EMAG applications


pp
but may
y
be useful for capturing stress concentrations etc. in structural
applications.
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Local Mesh Controls

Customer Training Material

Pinch: allows the removal of small features by pinching


out small edges and vertices (only).
Master: geometry that retains the original geometry profile.
Slave:
Sl
geometry
t that
th t changes
h
to
t move toward
t
d the
th master.
t
Can be automatic (Mesh level) or local (add Pinch branch).

Note: a global pinch control can be set in


g
the mesh branch details Defeaturing
section.
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C. Meshing Troubleshooting

Customer Training Material

Mesh Metrics: can be requested in the statistics section.


Select individual bars in the graph to view the elements graphically.

Note: each mesh metric is


described in detail in the
Meshing Users Guide of
the ANSYS documentation
documentation.

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. . . Meshing Troubleshooting

Customer Training Material

If the mesher is not able to generate satisfactory elements, an error message


will be returned:

The problematic geometry will be highlighted on the screen, and a named


selection group Problematic Geometry will be created, so the user may review
the model.

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Meshing Troubleshooting

Customer Training Material

Meshing failures can be caused by a number of things:


Inconsistent sizing controls specified on surfaces, which would result in
the creation of poorly-shaped elements
Difficult CAD geometry, such as small slivers or twisted surfaces
Stricter shape checking (Aggressive setting in Mesh branch)

Some ways to avoid meshing failures:


Specify more reasonable sizing controls on geometry
Specify smaller sizing controls to allow the mesher to create bettershaped elements
In the CAD system, use hidden line removal plots to see sliver or
unwanted geometry and remove them
Use virtual cells to combine sliver or very small surfaces
This
Thi option
ti will
ill be
b discussed
di
d nextt

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D. Virtual Topology

Customer Training Material

Virtual Topology: combines surfaces and edges for


meshing control:
Vi
Virtual
t lT
Topology
l
b
branch
h iis added
dd d to
t the
th Model
M d l
branch.
A Virtual Cell is a group of adjacent surfaces that
acts as a single surface.
Interior lines of original surfaces will no longer be
honored by meshing process.
For other operations such as applying Loads and
Supports, a virtual cell can be referenced as a single
entity.
Virtual cells can be generated automatically via RMB:
The Behavior controls the aggressiveness of the Merge
Face Edges?
Edges? setting for auto generation
generation.

Example . . .

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Virtual Topology Example

Customer Training Material

Consider the example below:

Virtual
Cell

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Virtual Topology Example

Customer Training Material

Keep in mind that the topology can change!


Example: a chamfer is added to the top surface in this virtual cell. The
interior lines are not recognized anymore.
Elements edge is shown as a solid
line and the original chamfer and
top surface is shown as a dotted
blue line.

Original mesh

The chamfer representation is no


longer present.

Mesh using virtual


topology
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. . . Virtual Topology

Customer Training Material

In addition to creating virtual faces, edges can be split to form virtual


edges to aid in various meshing operations.

Virtual Split Edge at +: splits at


the selection point along the
edge.
Virtual Split Edge: requires a
fractional entry indicating the
position along the edge where
the split will be located (e.g.
(e g 0.5
05
results in the line split in half).

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E. Workshop 4.1 Mesh Control

Customer Training Material

Workshop 4.1 Mesh Control


Goal:
Use the various mesh controls to enhance
the mesh for the solenoid model.

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L t
Lecture
5
Static Structural Analysis
y

Introduction to ANSYS
Mechanical
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Chapter Overview

In this chapter, performing linear static structural analyses in


Mechanical will be covered:
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.

Customer Training Material

Geometry
Assemblies and Contact Types
Analysis Settings
Environment, including Loads and Supports
Solving Models
Results and Postprocessing

The capabilities described in this section are generally applicable to


ANSYS DesignSpace Entra licenses and above.

Some options discussed in this chapter may require more advanced


licenses, but these are noted accordingly.

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Basics of Linear Static Analysis

Customer Training Material

For a linear static structural analysis, the displacements {x} are solved
for in the matrix equation below:

Assumptions:

[K ]{x} = {F }

[K] is constant
Linear elastic material behavior is assumed
Small deflection theory is used
Some nonlinear boundary conditions may be included

{F} is statically applied


No time-varying forces are considered
No inertial effects (mass, damping) are included

It is important to remember these assumptions related to linear static


analysis.
l i Nonlinear
N li
static
t ti and
d dynamic
d
i analyses
l
are covered
d in
i later
l t
chapters.

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A. Geometry

Customer Training Material

In structural analyses, all types of bodies supported by Mechanical


may be used.
For surface bodies, thickness must be
supplied in the Details view of the
Geometry branch.

The cross-section and orientation of line bodies are defined within


DesignModeler and are imported into Mechanical automatically.
automatically

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Point Mass

Customer Training Material

A Point Mass can be added to a model (Geometry branch) to simulate parts of


the structure not explicitly modeled:
A point mass is associated with surface(s)
( ) only.
y
The location can be defined by either:
(x, y, z) coordinates in any user-defined Coordinate System.
Selecting vertices/edges/surfaces to define location.

Point mass is affected by Acceleration


Acceleration, Standard
Standard Earth Gravity
Gravity, and
Rotational Velocity. No other loads affect a point mass.
The mass is connected to selected surfaces
assuming no stiffness between them.
No rotational inertial terms are present.

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Material Properties

Customer Training Material

Youngs Modulus and Poissons Ratio are required for linear static
structural analyses:
Material input is handled in the Engineering Data application.
Mass density is required if any inertial loads are present.
Thermal expansion coefficient is required if a uniform temperature load
is applied.
Thermal conductivity is NOT required for uniform temperature
conditions.
Stress Limits are needed if a Stress Tool result is present.
Fatigue
F ti
Properties
P
ti are needed
d d if Fatigue
F ti
Tool
T l result
lt is
i present.
t
Requires Fatigue Module add-on license.

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B. Assemblies Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

When importing assemblies of solid parts, contact regions are automatically


created between the solid bodies.
Contact allows non-matching meshes at boundaries between solid parts
Tolerance
T l
controls
t l under
d Contact
C t t branch
b
h allows
ll
the
th user to
t specify
if distance
di t
off
auto contact detection via slider bar

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Assemblies Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

In Mechanical, the concept of contact and target surfaces are used for each
contact region:
One side of a contact region is referred to as a contact surface, the other side is
referred to as a target surface
surface.
The contact surfaces are restricted from penetrating through the target surface.
When one side is designated the contact and the other side the target, this is called
asymmetric contact.
If b
both
th sides
id are made
d tto b
be contact
t t & ttargett thi
this is
i called
ll d symmetric
t i contact.
t t
C
T symmetric
By default, Mechanical
uses
contact for solid assemblies.
For ANSYS Professional licenses and
above the user may change to
above,
asymmetric contact, as desired.

Sy
Symmetric
et c
Contact
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Asymmetric
Contact
L5-8

Release 13.0
November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Assemblies Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

Five contact types are available:


Contact Type
Bonded
No Separation
Frictionless
Rough
Frictional

Iterations
1
1
Multiple
Multiple
Multiple

Normal Behavior (Separation) Tangential Behavior (Sliding)


No Gaps
No Sliding
No Gaps
Sliding Allowed
Gaps Allowed
Sliding Allowed
Gaps Allowed
No Sliding
Gaps Allowed
Sliding Allowed

Bonded and No Separation contact are linear and require


only 1 iteration.
Frictionless, Rough and Frictional contact are nonlinear
and require multiple iterations.

Nonlinear contact types allow an interface treatment


option:
Add Offset: input zero or non
non-zero
zero value for initial
adjustment
Adjusted to Touch: ANSYS closes any gap to a just
touching position (ANSYS Professional and above)

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L5-9

Release 13.0
November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Assemblies Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

Interface treatment options:


C

Add offset: contact surface is


numerically offset a given amount
i positive
in
iti or negative
ti direction
di ti
(offset can be ramped on).
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Adjusted to touch: offsets contact


surface to provide initial contact
with
ith target
t
t regardless
dl
off actual
t l
gap/penetration.
L5-10

Release 13.0
November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Assemblies Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

Advanced options (see chapter 3 for


additional details on the pinball region):
Pin Ball Region:
Inside pinball = near-field contact
Outside pinball = far-field contact
Allows the solver to more efficiently
process contact calculations
calculations.

For ANSYS Professional licenses and above,


mixed assemblies of shells and solids are
supported as well as more contact options.
In this case, the gap between
the two parts is bigger than the
pinball region, so no automatic
gap closure will be performed.

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L5-11

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Assemblies Spot Weld

Customer Training Material

Spot welds provide a means of connecting shell assemblies at discrete


points:
Spotweld definition is done in the CAD software. Currently, only DesignModeler
and Unigraphics define supported spot weld definitions.
definitions

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L5-12

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

C. Analysis Settings

Customer Training Material

The Analysis Settings details provide general


control over the solution process:
Step Controls:
Manual and auto time stepping controls.
Specify the number of steps in an analysis and an
end time for each step.
Time is a tracking
g mechanism in static analyses
y
(discussed later).

Solver Controls:
Two solvers available (default program
chosen):
Direct solver (Sparse solver in ANSYS).
Iterative solver (PCG solver in ANSYS).

Weak
W k springs:
i
Mechanical tries to anticipate underconstrained models.

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Analysis Settings Analysis Data Management

Customer Training Material

Analysis Data Management:


Solver Files Directory is the location where
analysis files will be stored if a project has not
yet been saved.
Future Analysis: indicates whether a down
stream analysis (e.g. pre-stressed modal) will
use the solution. This is set automatically
when coupled analyses are configured in the
project schematic
schematic.
Scratch Solver Files Directory: temporary
directory used during solution.
Save MAPDL db.
Delete
D l t U
Unneeded
d d Files:
Fil
may choose
h
to
t save all
ll
files for future use in Mechanical APDL.
Solver Units: Active System or manual.
Solver Unit System: if the above setting is

manual,
l you may choose
h
1 off 8 possible
ibl
solver unit systems to insure consistency
when data is shared with Mechanical APDL
(does not affect results/load displays in the
GUI)
GUI).

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Analysis Settings Step Controls

Customer Training Material

Step Controls:
Multiple steps allow a series of static analyses to
be set up and solved sequentially.
For a static analysis
analysis, the end time can be used as
a counter/tracker to identify the load steps and
substeps.
Results can be viewed step by step.
Load values for each step can be entered in the
Tabular Data section provided.
The time and load value
are displayed in the
graphics window

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Multiple Steps

Customer Training Material

A summary of all the different steps can be viewed by highlighting


Analysis Type and then selecting the Worksheet tab.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Multiple Steps

Customer Training Material

Results for each individual step can be viewed after the solution by
selecting the desired step and RMB >Retrieve This Result.

Select desired
step and RMB to
retrieve result

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

D. Loads and Supports

Customer Training Material

Loads and supports are thought of in terms of the


degrees of freedom (DOF) available for the elements
used.
In solids the DOF are x, y and z translations (for
shells we add rotational DOF rotx, roty and rotz).
Supports, regardless of actual names, are always
defined in terms of DOF.

UY
UX
UZ

For example a Frictionless Support applied to the


Z surface of the block shown would indicate that the
Z degree
g
of freedom is no longer
g free (all
( other DOF
are free).
Frictionless surface

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Loads and Supports

Customer Training Material

Load types:
Inertial loads:
These loads act on the entire system.
Density is required for mass calculations.
These are only loads which act on defined Point Masses.

Structural Loads:
Forces
F
or moments
t acting
ti on parts
t off the
th system.
t

Structural Supports:
Constraints that prevent movement on certain regions.

Thermal Loads:
The thermal loads which result in a temperature field causing thermal
expansion/contraction in the model.

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Directional Loads

Customer Training Material

Loads and supports having a direction


component can be defined in global or local
coordinate systems:
In the Details view
view, change Define By to
Components. Then, select the appropriate CS
from the pull-down menu.

Load
Supports Coordinate Systems
Acceleration
No
Standard Earth Gravity
Yes
Rotational Velocity
Yes
Force
Yes
Remote Force
Location of Origin Only
B i LLoadd
Bearing
Y
Yes
Moment
Yes
Given Displacement
Yes

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L5-20

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Acceleration & Gravity

Customer Training Material

Acceleration:
Acts on entire model in length/time2 units.
Acceleration can be defined by
y Components
p
or Vector.
Body will move in the opposite direction of the applied acceleration.

Standard Earth Gravity:


Value
V l applied
li d coincides
i id with
ith selected
l t d unit
it system.
t
Standard Earth Gravity direction is defined along one of three global or
local coordinate system axes.
Body
B d will
ill move in
i the
h same direction
di
i off the
h applied
li d gravity.
i
Rotational velocity:
Entire model rotates about an axis at a given rate.
Define by vector or component method.
Input can be in radians per second (default) or RPM.

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Forces and Pressures

Customer Training Material

Pressure loading:
Applied to surfaces, acts normal to the surface.
Positive value into surface, negative value acts out of surface.
Units of pressure are in force per area.

Force loading:
Forces can be applied
pp
on vertices,, edges,
g , or surfaces.
The force will be evenly distributed on all entities. Units are
mass*length/time2.
Force can be defined via vector or component methods.

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L5-22

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Hydrostatic Pressure

Customer Training Material

Hydrostatic Pressure:
Applies a linearly varying load to a surface (solid or
shell) to mimic fluid force acting on the structure.
Fluid may be contained or external.
external
User specifies:

Magnitude and direction of acceleration.


Fluid Density.
C
Coordinate
di t system
t
representing
ti the
th free
f
surface
f
off the
th fluid.
fl id
For Shells, a Top/Bottom face option is provided.

Internal
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External
L5-23

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Bearing Load

Customer Training Material

Bearing Load (force):


Force component distributed on compressive
side using projected area.
Axial components are not allowed
allowed.
Use only one bearing load per cylindrical
surface.
If the cylindrical surface is split be sure to
select
l t both
b th halves
h l
off cylindrical
li d i l surface
f
when applying this load.
Bearing load can be defined via vector or
component method.

Bearing Load
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Force Load
L5-24

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Moment Load

Customer Training Material

Moment Loading :

For solid bodies moments can be applied on a surface only.


If multiple surfaces are selected, the moment load is evenly distributed.
V t or componentt method
Vector
th d can be
b employed
l
d using
i
the
th right
i ht hand
h d rule.
l
For surface bodies a moment can be applied to a vertex, edge or surface.
Units of moment are in Force*length.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Remote Load

Customer Training Material

Remote Force Loading :

Applies an offset force on a surface or edge of a body.


The user supplies the origin of the force (geometry or coordinates).
Can be defined using vector or component method.
Applies an equivalent force and moment on the surface.

Example: 10 inch beam with a 1 lbf remote force scoped to the end of
the beam. Remote force is located 20 inches from the fixed support.
F=1 lbf

20

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Moment Reaction

L5-26

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Bolt Pretension

Customer Training Material

Bolt Pretension:
Applies a pretension load to a solid cylindrical section or beam using:
Pretension load (force)
OR
Adjustment (length)

For body loading a local coordinate system is required (preload in z


direction).
For sequenced loading additional options are available (see next page).

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Bolt Pretension Sequenced Simulation

Customer Training Material

The Define By field in the details view provides the


following options for sequence loading:
Load or Adjustment: as defined on previous page.
Lock : Fixes all displacements (load applied and held).
Open : Leaves the pretension load open (no pretension).

2
4
3
1

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Bolt Load Tips:


3D simulations only.
Cylindrical surfaces or bodies only.
A refined mesh is recommended (at least 2 elements
in axial direction).
L5-28

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . Line Pressure

Customer Training Material

Line Pressure loading :


Applies a distributed force on one edge only for 3-D simulations, using
force density loading.
Units are in force/length.
Can be defined by :
Magnitude and Vector
Magnitude and component direction (global or local coordinate systems)
Magnitude and tangential

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Supports

Customer Training Material

Fixed Support :
Constraints all degrees of freedom on vertex, edge, or
surface
Solid bodies: constrains x, y, and z
Surface and line bodies: constrains x, y, z, rotx, roty and
rotz

Given Displacement :
Applies
pp
known displacement
p
on vertex, edge,
g or surface
Allows for imposed translational displacement in x, y,
and z (in user-defined Coordinate System)
Entering 0 means that the direction is constrained,
g the direction blank means the direction is free.
leaving

Elastic Support :
Allows faces/edges to deform according to a spring
behavior.
behavior
Foundation stiffness is the pressure required to produce
unit normal deflection of the foundation

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Supports

Customer Training Material

Frictionless Support:
Applies constraints (fixes) in normal direction on surfaces.
For solid bodies, this support can be used to apply a symmetry boundary
condition.
Examples . . .
Fixed in radial
direction

Free translation in
plane of support

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Fixed translation
out of plane of
support

Free in tangential
and axial
directions
L5-31

Release 13.0
November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Supports

Customer Training Material

Cylindrical Support:
Provides individual control for axial, radial, or tangential constraints.
Applied on cylindrical surfaces.
Radial

Tangential
Example . . .

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L5-32

Axial

Release 13.0
November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Supports (Solid Bodies)

Customer Training Material

Compression Only Support :


Applies a constraint in the normal compressive
direction only.
Can be used on a cylindrical surface to model a
pin, bolt, etc..
Requires an iterative (nonlinear) solution.

Force

Compression Only
Force

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Supports (Line/Surface Bodies)

Customer Training Material

Simply Supported :
Can be applied on edge or vertex of surface or line bodies
Prevents all translations but all rotations are free

Fixed Rotation :
Can be applied on surface, edge, or vertex of surface or line bodies
Constrains rotations but translations are free
Translations free

Translation fixed

Rotations fixed

Rotations free

Simply Supported Edge


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Fixed Rotation Edge


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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Thermal Loading

Customer Training Material

Thermal condition :
Applies a uniform temperature in a structural analysis.
Appears under Loads in structural analysis.
A reference temperature must be provided (see next slide).

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Thermal Loading

Customer Training Material

A temperature differential can cause thermal expansion or


contraction in a structure:
Thermal strains (th) are calculated as follows:

thx = thy = thz = (T Tref )

= thermal expansion coefficient (CTE material property).


Tref = reference temperature (thermal strains are zero).
T = applied temperature (see previous slide).
Reference temperature is defined in the environment branch (global)
or as a property of individual bodies.
bodies

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Solving the Model

Customer Training Material

To solve the model click on the Solve button on the Standard Toolbar.
Two processors used if present (default).
To set the number use, Tools > Solve Process Settings.

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

E. Workshop 5.1 Linear Structural Analysis

Customer Training Material

Workshop 5.1 Linear Structural Analysis


Goal:
A 5 part assembly representing an impeller type pump is
analyzed with a 100N preload on the belt.

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L5-38

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November 2010

Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

F. Results and Postprocessing

Customer Training Material

Numerous structural results are available:

Directional and total deformation.


Components, principal, or invariants of stresses and strains.
Contact output.
Reaction forces.

In Mechanical, results may be requested before or after solving.


If you solve a model then request results afterwards, click on the Solve
, and the results will be retrieved.
button
A new solution is not required.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Plotting Results

Customer Training Material

Contour and vector plots are usually shown on the deformed geometry.
Use the Context Toolbar to change settings.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Deformation

Customer Training Material

The deformation of the model can be plotted:


Total deformation is a scalar quantity:

U total = U x2 + U y2 + U z2
The x, y, and z components of deformation can be
requested under Directional
Directional, in global or local coordinates.
coordinates
Vector plots of deformation are available (see below).

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Stresses and Strains

Customer Training Material

Stresses and strains:


Stresses and (elastic) strains have six components
(x, y, z, xy, yz, xz) while thermal strains have three components (x, y, z)
For stresses and strains,, components
p
can be requested
q
under Normal (x,
( , y, z))
and Shear (xy, yz, xz). For thermal strains, (x, y, z) components are under
Thermal.
Principal stresses are always arranged such that s1 > s2 > s3
Intensity
y is defined as the largest
g
of the absolute values
s1 - s2, s2 - s3 or s3 - s1

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Stress Tools

Customer Training Material

Safety Factors (choose from 4 failure


theories):
Ductile Theories:
Maximum Equivalent Stress
Maximum Shear Stress

Brittle Theories:
Mohr-Coulomb
M h C l b Stress
St
Maximum Tensile Stress

Within each stress tool safety factor, safety


margin and stress ratio can be plotted
plotted.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Contact Results

Customer Training Material

Contact results are requested via a Contact


Tool under the Solution branch.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Contact Results

Customer Training Material

Select the contact region(s) for the Contact Tool (2 methods):


1. Worksheet view (details): select contact regions from the list.
Contact, target or both sides can be selected.

2. Geometry: select contact regions on the graphics screen.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

User Defined Results

Customer Training Material

In addition to the standard result items one can insert user defined
results.
These results can include mathematical expressions and can be
combinations of multiple result items.
Define in 2 ways:
Select User Defined Result from the solution context menu

OR - From the Solution Worksheet highlight result > RMB > Create User
Defined Result.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

. . . User Defined Results

Customer Training Material

Details allow an expression using various


basic math operations as well as square
root, absolute value, exponent, etc..
User defined results can be labeled with a
user Identifier.
Result legend contains identifier and
expression.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

G. Workshop 5.2 2D Structural Analysis

Customer Training Material

Workshop 5.2 2D Structural Analysis


2D structural analyses.
Shown here is the 2D axisymmetric model.

Retaining Ring

Pressure Cap

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Customer Training Material

L t
Lecture
6
Vibration Analysis
y

Introduction to ANSYS
Mechanical
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L6-1

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Chapter Overview

Customer Training Material

In this chapter, performing free vibration as well as pre-stressed


vibration analyses in Mechanical will be covered. In Mechanical,
performing a free vibration analysis is similar to a linear static
analysis.
analysis
It is assumed that the user has already covered Chapter 4 Linear Static
Structural Analysis prior to this section.

The following
g will be covered:
Free Vibration Analysis Procedure
Free Vibration with Pre-Stress Analysis Procedure

The capabilities described in this section are generally applicable to


ANSYS DesignSpace Entra licenses and above.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Basics of Free Vibration Analysis

Customer Training Material

For a free vibration analysis, the natural circular frequencies i and


mode shapes i are calculated from:

([K ] [M ]){ } = 0
2
i

Assumptions:
A
i
[K] and [M] are constant:

Linear elastic material behavior is assumed


S ll deflection
Small
d fl ti
theory
th
is
i used,
d and
d no nonlinearities
li
iti included
i l d d
[C] is not present, so damping is not included
{F} is not present, so no excitation of the structure is assumed
The structure can be constrained or unconstrained

Mode shapes {} are relative values, not absolute

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

A. Free Vibration Analysis Procedure

Customer Training Material

The free vibration analysis procedure is very similar to performing a


linear static analysis, so not all steps will be covered in detail. The
steps in blue italics are specific to free vibration analyses.

Attach Geometry
Assign Material Properties
Define Contact Regions (if applicable)
Define Mesh Controls (optional)
Define Analysis Type
Include Supports (if applicable)
Request Modal Results
Set Modal Options
Solve the Model
Review Results

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Geometry and Point Mass

Customer Training Material

Modal analysis supports any type of geometry:


Solid bodies, surface bodies and line bodies

The Point Mass feature can be used:


The Point Mass adds mass only (no stiffness) in a free vibration analysis.
Point Masses will decrease the natural frequency in free vibration analyses.

Material properties: Youngs Modulus, Poissons Ratio, and Density


are
a
e required.
equ ed

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Contact Regions

Customer Training Material

Contact regions are available in free vibration analyses. However,


contact behavior will differ for the nonlinear contact types:
Contact Type
Bonded
No Separation
Rough
Frictionless

Static Analysis
Bonded
No Separation
Rough
Frictionless

Initially Touching
Bonded
No Separation
Bonded
No Separation

Modal
M
d l Analysis
A l i
Inside Pinball Region
Bonded
No Separation
Free
Free

Outside Pinball Region


Free
Free
Free
Free

Contact free vibration analyses:


Rough
R
h and
d frictionless:
f i ti l
will internally behave as bonded or no separation
If a gap is present, the nonlinear contact behaviors will be free (i.e., as if no
contact is present).

Bonded and no separation contact status will depend on the pinball


region size.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Analysis Type

Customer Training Material

Select Modal from the Workbench toolbox to specify a modal


analysis system.
Within Mechanical Analysis Settings:
Specify the number of modes to find: 1 to 200 (default is 6).
Specify the frequency search range (defaults from 0Hz to 1e+08Hz).

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Loads and Supports

Customer Training Material

Structural and thermal loads are not available in free vibration.


Supports:
If no or partial supports are present, rigid-body modes can be
detected and evaluated (modes will be at or near 0 Hz).
The boundary conditions affect the mode shapes and frequencies of
the part. Carefully consider how the model is constrained.
The compression only support is a nonlinear support and should
not be used in the analysis.
analysis

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Requesting Results

Customer Training Material

Solve the model (no results need to be requested).


When complete, the solution branch will display a bar chart and table
listing frequencies and mode numbers.

Request specific mode shapes to be displayed by RMB (can select all


q
if desired).
)
frequencies
This will insert the Total Deformation results for the requested mode
shapes.

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Reviewing Results

Customer Training Material

Mode shapes:
Because there is no excitation applied to the structure, the mode shapes are
relative values associated with free vibration.
The
Th frequency
f
is
i listed
li t d in
i the
th Details
D t il view
i
off the
th result
lt being
b i viewed.
i
d
The animation toolbar from the timeline tab below the graphics window can be
used to help visualize the mode shapes.

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B. Workshop 6.1 Free Vibration

Customer Training Material

Workshop 6.1 Free Vibration Analysis


Goal:
Investigate the vibration characteristics of motor cover design shown
here manufactured from 18 gauge steel.

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C. Free Vibration with Pre-Stress

Customer Training Material

In some cases, one may want to consider prestress effects when


performing a free vibration analysis.
The stress state of a structure under constant (static) loads may affect
its natural frequencies such as a guitar string being tuned.

[ o ] [S ]

[K ]{xo } = {F }

A stress stiffness matrix is


calculated from the
structural analysis

A linear static analysis


is performed

([K + S ]

[M ]){i } = 0

The original
g
free vibration equation
q
is
modified to include the [S] term
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Procedure w/ Pre-Stress Effects

Customer Training Material

Setup a pre-stressed modal analysis by linking a static structural


system to a modal system (at the solution level) in the project
schematic.

Notice in the modal branch, the structural


y
result becomes an initial condition.
analysis

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Example w/ Pre-Stress Effects

Customer Training Material

Consider a simple comparison of a thin plate fixed at one end


Two analyses will be run free vibration and free vibration with prestress effects to compare the differences between the two.

Free Vibration

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Example w/ Pre-Stress Effects

Customer Training Material

In this example, with the applied force, a tensile stress state is


produced which increases the natural frequencies.

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Free Vibration

Free Vibration with Pre-Stress

1st mode frequency: 83.587 Hz

1st mode frequency: 99.679 Hz

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D. Workshop 6.2 Prestressed Modal

Customer Training Material

Workshop 6.2 Prestressed Modal Analysis


Goal: simulate the modal response of the tension link (shown below)
in both a stressed and unstressed state.

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L t
Lecture
7
Thermal Analysis
y

Introduction to ANSYS
Mechanical
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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Chapter Overview

Customer Training Material

In this chapter, performing steady-state thermal analyses in Mechanical will


be covered:
A. Geometry
B Assemblies Solid Body Contact
B.
C. Heat Loads
D. Solution Options
E. Results and Postprocessing
F. Workshop 7.1

The capabilities described in this section are generally applicable to ANSYS


DesignSpace licenses and above, except for an ANSYS Structural license.

Note: advanced topics including thermal transient analyses are covered in


the ANSYS Thermal Analysis training course.

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Basics of Steady-State Heat Transfer

Customer Training Material

For a steady-state (static) thermal analysis in Mechanical, the


temperatures {T} are solved for in the matrix below:

[K (T )]{T } = {Q(T )}
Assumptions:
No transient effects are considered in a steady-state analysis
[K] can be constant or a function of temperature
{Q} can be constant or a function of temperature

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Basics of Steady-State Heat Transfer

Customer Training Material

Fouriers Law provides the basis of the previous equation:


Heat flow within a solid (Fouriers Law) is the basis of [K]
Heat flux, heat flow rate, and convection are treated as boundary
y conditions on
the system {Q}
Convection is treated as a boundary condition although temperaturedependent film coefficients are possible

It is important to remember these assumptions related to performing


thermal analyses in Mechanical.

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A. Geometry

Customer Training Material

In thermal analyses all body types are supported:


Solid, surface, and line bodies.
Line bodies cross-section and orientation is defined within DesignModeler.
The Point Mass feature is not available in thermal analyses.

Shell and line body assumptions:


Shells: no through-thickness temperature gradients.
Line bodies: no through thickness variation. Assumes a constant
temperature across the cross-section.
Temperature variation will still be considered along the line body

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Material Properties

Customer Training Material

The only required material property for steady state is thermal


conductivity.

Thermal Conductivity is
input in the Engineering
Data application
pp

Temperature-dependent
th
thermal
l conductivity
d ti it is
i
input as a table

If any temperature-dependent material properties exist, this will


result
lt in
i a nonlinear
li
solution.
l ti

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B. Assemblies Solid Body Contact

Customer Training Material

As with structural analyses, contact regions are automatically created to


enable heat transfer between parts of assemblies.

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Assemblies Contact Region

Customer Training Material

If parts are initially in contact heat transfer can occur between them.
If parts are initially out of contact no heat transfer takes place (see pinball
explanation
p
below).
)
Summary:

Contact Type
Bonded
No Separation
Rough
Frictionless
Frictional

Heat Transfer Between Parts in Contact Region?


Initially Touching
Inside Pinball Region Outside Pinball Region
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
No
Yes
No
No
Yes
No
No

The pinball region determines when contact occurs and is automatically


defined and set to a relatively small value to accommodate small gaps in
the model

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Assemblies Contact Region

Customer Training Material

If the contact is bonded or no separation,


then heat transfer will occur (solid green
lines) when the surfaces are within the
pinball radius.

Pinball Radius

In this figure on the right, the


gap between the two parts is
bigger than the pinball region,
so no heat transfer will occur
between the parts
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Assemblies Thermal Conductance

Customer Training Material

By default, perfect thermal contact conductance between parts is


assumed, meaning no temperature drop occurs at the interface.
Numerous conditions can contribute to less than perfect contact
conductance:

surface flatness
surface finish
oxides
entrapped fluids
contact pressure
surface temperature
use of conductive grease
....

T
T
x

Continued . . .

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Assemblies Thermal Conductance

Customer Training Material

The amount of heat flow across a contact interface is defined by the


contact heat flux q:

q = TCC (Ttarget Tcontact )

where Tcontact is the temperature of a contact node and Ttarget is the


temperature of the corresponding target node
node.
By default, TCC is set to a relatively high value based on the largest
material conductivity defined in the model KXX and the diagonal of the
overall
o
e a geo
geometry
et y bou
bounding
d g box
bo ASMDIAG.
S
G

TCC = KXX 10,000 / ASMDIAG


This essentially provides perfect conductance between parts.

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Assemblies Thermal Conductance

Customer Training Material

In ANSYS Professional licenses and above, the user may define a


finite thermal contact conductance (TCC) for Pure Penalty or
Augmented Lagrange Formulations.
TCC is input for each contact region in the Details view.
If thermal contact resistance is known, invert this value and divide by the
contacting area to obtain TCC value.

Thermal contact conductance can


be input which is the same as
including thermal contact
resistance at a contact interface.
interface

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Assemblies Spot Weld

Customer Training Material

Spot welds provide discreet heat transfer points:


Spotweld definition is done in the CAD software (currently only
DesignModeler and Unigraphics).

T2

T1

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C. Heat Loads

Customer Training Material

Heat Flow:
A heat flow rate can be applied to a vertex, edge, or surface. The load is
distributed for multiple selections.
Heat flow has units of energy/time.

Perfectly insulated (heat flow = 0):


Available to remove surfaces from previously applied boundary conditions.

Heat Flux:
Heat flux can be applied to surfaces only (edges in 2D).
Heat flux has units of energy/time/area.

Internal
I t
l Heat
H t Generation:
G
ti
An internal heat generation rate can be applied to bodies only.
Heat generation has units of energy/time/volume.

A positive value for heat load will add energy to the system.

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Thermal Boundary Conditions

Customer Training Material

Temperature, Convection and Radiation:


At least one type of thermal boundary condition must be present to prevent the
thermal equivalent of rigid body motion.
motion
Given Temperature or Convection load should not be applied on surfaces that
already have another heat load or thermal boundary condition applied to it.
Perfect insulation will override thermal boundary conditions.

Given Temperature:
Imposes
I
a temperature
t
t
on vertices,
ti
edges,
d
surfaces
f
or bodies
b di
Temperature is the degree of freedom solved for

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Thermal Boundary Conditions

Customer Training Material

Convection:
Applied to surfaces only (edges in 2D analyses).
Convection q is defined by
y a film coefficient h,, the surface area A,, and the
difference in the surface temperature Tsurface & ambient temperature
Tambient

q = hA(Tsurface
Tambient
f
bi t )

h and Tambient are user input values.


The film coefficient h can be constant or temperature dependent

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Thermal Boundary Conditions

Customer Training Material

Temperature-Dependent Convection:
Select Tabular (Temperature) for the
coefficient type.
Enter coefficient vs temperature
tabular data.
In the details, specify how temperature
is to be handled for h(T).

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Thermal Boundary Conditions

Customer Training Material

Several common convection correlations can be imported from a


sample library. New correlations can be stored in libraries.

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. . . Thermal Boundary Conditions

Customer Training Material

Radiation:
Applied to surfaces (edges in 2D analyses)

Where:

4
4
QR = FA Tsurface
Tambient

= Stefan-Boltzman constant
y
= Emissivity
A = Area of radiating surface
F = Form factor

Correlations:
To ambient (form factor assumed to be 1)
OR
Surface to surface (view factors calculated).
Stefan Boltzman constant is set automatically
based on the active working unit system

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D. Solution Options

Customer Training Material

Inserting the Steady-State Thermal from the


Workbench toolbox will set up a SS Thermal
system in the project schematic.
Analysis Settings
Settings can be used
In Mechanical the Analysis
to set solution options for the thermal analysis.
Note, the same Analysis Data Management
options discussed in chapter 4 regarding static
analyses are available here.
here

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Solving the Model

Customer Training Material

To perform a thermal-stress solution link a structural analysis to


the thermal model at the Solution level.
An imported load branch is inserted in the Static Structural
branch along with any applied structural loads and supports.
supports
Solve the Structural branch.

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E. Results and Postprocessing

Customer Training Material

Various results are available for postprocessing:

Temperature
Heat Flux
Reaction Heat Flow Rate
User defined results

In Mechanical, results are usually


y requested before solving,
g but they
y
can be requested afterwards, too.
A new solution is not required for retrieving output of a solved model.

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Temperature

Customer Training Material

Temperature:
Temperature is a scalar quantity and has no
direction associated with it.

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Heat Flux

Customer Training Material

Heat flux contour or vector plots are available:


Heat flux q is defined as

q = KXX T
Total Heat Flux and Directional Heat Flux can be
requested
The magnitude & direction can be plotted as vectors by activating
vector mode

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Reaction Heat Flow Rate

Customer Training Material

Reaction heat flow rates are available for Given Temperature,


convection or radiation boundary conditions:
Reaction heat flow rate is requested by inserting a probe - OR
Alternately users can drag and drop a boundary condition onto the
Solution branch to retrieve the reaction.

Select from
Probe menu
OR
Drag and drop
boundary condition

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F. Workshop 7 Steady State Thermal Analysis

Customer Training Material

Workshop 7.1 Steady State Thermal Analysis


Goal:
Analyze the pump housing shown below for its heat transfer
characteristics.

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L t
Lecture
8
Results and
Postprocessing

Introduction to ANSYS
Mechanical
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Chapter Overview

Customer Training Material

In this chapter, aspects of reviewing results will be covered:


A. Viewing Results
B. Scoping Results
C. Exporting Results
D. Coordinate Systems & Directional Results
E. Solution Combinations
F. Stress Singularities
G. Error Estimation
H. Convergence

The capabilities described in this section are applicable to all ANSYS


licenses, except when noted otherwise

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A. Viewing Results

Customer Training Material

When selecting a results branch, the Context toolbar displays ways


of viewing results:
Min/Max
Probe

Display Method

Displacement Scaling

Contour Settings

Outline Display

Vector Display Controls

In addition, the Timeline also has an animation toolbar which lets


the user set animation controls
Distribute

Play

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Pause

Markers

Export

Frame Rate Control

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Displacement Scaling

Customer Training Material

For structural analyses (static, modal, buckling),


the deformed shape can be changed:
By default, a scale factor multiplies actual displacements.
The user can change to true scale or undeformed displays.

Automatic Displacement Scaling

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True Scale

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Legend Controls

Customer Training Material

Right Clicking on the legend in the graphics area allows the user to
modify the legend controls.
Edit Value
Export/Import/Switch to a saved legend setting
Increase/Decrease Contour Bands

Horizontal/Vertical legend
Display Date/Time
Display Max/Min label on the legend

Switch to Logarithmic
g
Scale

Switch to Scientific Notation

Number of Significant Digits

Continued . . .
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Legend Controls

Customer Training Material

The legend bounds can be manipulated to


show result distributions more clearly for
contour plots.

Max/Min values
are unchanged

Click and drag contour dividers (or


type in) to specify contour ranges.
A non-uniform distribution of
contours can be used as well.
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Manipulating the Legend

Customer Training Material

Independent Bands allow neutral colors to represent regions of the


model above or below the specified legend limits.

Legend Contour
Range

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Display Method

Customer Training Material

The Geometry button controls the contour display


method. Four choices are available:
Exterior

IsoSurfaces

Exterior is the default


display option and is
most commonly used.
IsoSurfaces is useful
to display
p y regions
g
with
the same contour value.
Slice Planes

Capped IsoSurfaces

Capped IsoSurfaces
will remove regions of
the model where the
contour values are
above ((or below)) a
specified value.
Slice Planes allow a
user to cut through the
model visually. A
capped slice plane is
also available, as shown
on the left.

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Display Method

Customer Training Material

Capped IsoSurfaces are manipulated by an independent controller:


Icons allow isosurface cap to be top or bottom.
The striped
p areas of the legend
g
show what values will not be displayed.
p y
The cap threshold can be controlled via the slider or by typing the value
directly

Top Capped Isosurface


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Bottom Capped Isosurface


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Contour Settings

Customer Training Material

The Contours button controls the way in which


contours are shown on the model
Contour Bands

Smooth Contours

Solid Fill

Isolines

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Outline Display

Customer Training Material

The Edges button allows the user show the


undeformed geometry or mesh

No Wireframe

Show Undeformed Wireframe

Show Elements

Show Undeformed Model

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Section Planes

Customer Training Material

Section Planes can be added and edited in both the


preprocessor as well as the post processor.
To add a section plane select the Draw Section Plane
icon, then click-drag with the left mouse.
Selection planes can be turned on/off using the check
box in the details view.
Delete section planes using the delete icon.
Edit section planes by highlighting desired plane name
and using
g the handle in the Graphics
p
window.
Move a slice plane by dragging handle

Sliced view of geometry in


Preprocessor
Sliced view of model in Post
Processor with results

Click on one side of bar to cap view

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Probe Tool

Customer Training Material

The Probe Tool allows you to scope a result object


to a location and make that result parametric.
The Probe Tool can be scoped to geometry, a local
coordinate system or using a remote point.
The orientation of the result item can be with respect
to global or local coordinate systems.

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. . . Probe Tool

Customer Training Material

Probe Tool example:


Local coordinate system defined as shown
Probe located at local CS
Stress results (all) requested

Probe Location
Local CS

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Charts and Tables

Customer Training Material

Combine results data from multiple steps (static or transient) into


charts and/or tables:
Select New Chart and Table icon.
From the details Apply the desired result(s).
Use the CTRL key to select multiple results.

Select desired display items in details.

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Animation Controls

Customer Training Material

The animation toolbar allows user to play, pause, and stop animations
Note: animations are accessed via the Timeline at the bottom of the
graphics screen

Control resolution and speed


Start/Stop/Pause

Distributed animation interpolates results


while results sets animates only solution
points.

Export video
(avi) file

Note: pause feature available during playback


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Alerts

Customer Training Material

Alerts are simple ways of check to see if a scalar result quantity


satisfies a criterion:
Highlight the particular result branch, RMB and insert an Alert.
In the Details view, specify the criterion.

In the Outline tree, a green checkmark indicates that the criterion is


satisfied. A red exclamation mark indicates that the criterion was not
satisfied.

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Vector Plots

Customer Training Material

Vector plots involve any result quantity with direction, such as


deformation, principal stresses/strains, and heat flux
Activate vectors for appropriate quantities using the vector graphics icon

Once the vectors are visible their appearance can be modified using the
vector display controls (see next slide for examples)

Vector Length Control

Proportional Vectors

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Equal Length Vectors

Vector Density Control

Element Aligned

L8-18

Grid Aligned

Line Form

Solid Form

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Vector Plots

Customer Training Material

Examples

Solid Form, Grid Aligned

Proportional
p
Length
g

Equal Length
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Solid Form, Equal Length

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Multiple Viewports

Customer Training Material

Multiple viewports can be used to display various images at the same


time (model or postprocessing data).
Useful to compare multiple results, such as results from different
environments or multiple mode shapes

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B. Scoping Results

Customer Training Material

Limiting results displays can be useful when postprocessing:


Scoping automatically scales the legend to results for selected regions.

To scope
p contour results:
Pre-select geometry then request the result of interest.
The non-selected geometry will be displayed as translucent.

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Scoping Surface/Part Results

Customer Training Material

Some examples of scoping results on surfaces/parts:

Stress results on selected surfaces


Scoping results on a single part

Vector Principal Stresses on single part


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Scoping Edge & Vertex Results

Customer Training Material

Results can be scoped to a single edge (or vertex):


Select edge(s) for results scoping.

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. . . Construction Geometry

Customer Training Material

Construction geometry consists of either a


path or surface.
Paths are defined using coordinate systems,
model edges or existing points.
Surfaces are located and oriented using
coordinate systems.

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. . . Scoping to a Path or Surface

Customer Training Material

Results may be mapped onto construction geometry in the details:

Path Plot Example

Surface Plot Example

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. . . Scoping to a Path

Customer Training Material

Path results may also be displayed in graphical form.


The X axis may be displayed as path location (S) or time (transient
analyses).

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. . . Linearized Stress

Customer Training Material

Using the path plot feature a linearized stress calculation can be


plotted (commonly used various structural codes such as ASME).

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C. Exporting Results

Customer Training Material

To export Worksheet tab information:


Select the branch and click on the Worksheet tab.
Right-click
g
the same branch and select Export.
p

To export Contour Results:


Right-click on the result branch of interest and select Export.

Tabular data from Mechanical can be exported


p
to Excel:
Select the cells to be exported.
Right click > Copy cell to copy all the data from the cells.
Paste into Excel.

Export
p
Worksheet

Export Results
Export Tables

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Exporting Results

Customer Training Material

To include node locations and vector directions in results exports,


change the Include Node Location option to Yes under Tools
menu > Options > Mechanical: Export

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

D. Coordinate Systems

Customer Training Material

Results containing directional components can be mapped to a local


coordinate system:
Select from defined coordinate systems
y
in the drop
p down list shown in
the detail window.
Direction Deformation, Normal/Shear Stress/Strain, and Directional Heat
Flux can use coordinate systems.

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Coordinate Systems

Customer Training Material

For the model shown below, displaying results in the local cylindrical
system transforms stresses into that system.

Stresses in Global Y-Direction

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Stresses in Local Cylindrical Y-Direction

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

E. Solution Combinations

Customer Training Material

In the project schematic, duplicating an analysis cell below the Model branch
(Setup, Solution or Result), allows the creation of Solution Combinations to
quickly evaluate results combinations.

Solution combinations are only valid for linear static structural analyses.
The supports must be the same between Environments (only the loading can
change).
ANSYS Professional license and above.

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. . . Solution Combinations

Customer Training Material

With the Model branch highlighted a Solution


C
Combination
bi ti can be
b chosen
h
from
f
the
th context
t t
menu.
A new branch is inserted where combined results
can be
b requested
t d and
d retrieved.
ti
d
With the Solution Combination branch highlighted,
the worksheet view allows multiple environments
to be combined.
combined Note: a multiplication factor may
be included in combinations (see below).

Solution Combination = Coef 1 * Environment 1 + Coef 2 * Environment 2 + . . .


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Solution Combinations

Customer Training Material

Example: a brake caliper is


simulated in both standing and
rolling configurations. After the
2 environments have solved a
resulting combination shows the
effect of both.

Solution Combination
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F. Stress Singularities

Customer Training Material

In most finite-element analyses as the mesh is refined one expects to


get mathematically more precise results.
Quantities directly solved for (degrees of freedom) such as
displacements and temperatures typically converge with little difficulty.
Derived quantities, such as stresses, strains, and heat flux, should also
converge as the mesh is refined but typically not as smoothly as DOF.
In
I some cases these
th
derived
d i d quantities
titi will
ill nott converge as the
th mesh
h is
i
refined and may even diverge.
These cases are sometimes the result of some form of stress singularity.

Force
o ce
=
As Area
Area

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Zero

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Stress Singularities

Customer Training Material

In a linear static structural analysis there are several situations which


may cause artificially high stresses:

Idealized Geometry

Point Constraints

Point Loads

In the above situations, refining the mesh at the artificially high stress
area will keep increasing the stresses.

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Stress Singularities

Customer Training Material

The Remedy:
If the singularity is not in an area of interest one can usually scope
results to regions of interest.
If the singularity is in the area of interest there are several ways to obtain
more accurate stress results:
Model geometry with fillets or other details which do not cause geometric
discontinuities.
discontinuities
Apply loads and/or constraints spread over areas rather than point locations
(see below).

Example

Distributed Loading

Point Loading
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G. Error Estimation

Customer Training Material

You can insert an Error result based on stresses (structural), or heat


flux (thermal) to help identify regions of high error (see example next
page).
These regions show where the model could benefit from a more
refined mesh in order to get a more accurate answer.
Regions of high error also indicate where refinement will take place if
convergence is used.

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. . . Error Estimation

Customer Training Material

Error plot shows region of high element


energy where mesh refinement may
improve the quality of the result.
In the thin plate example the initial
solution shows higher energy levels
between the 2 holes.
The refined mesh (bottom plot) shows a
reduction in local error.
Please note, error is a relative measure
comparing individual elements to one
another The actual value of the energy is
another.
generally not significant.

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H. Convergence

Customer Training Material

As the mesh is refined, typically the mathematical model becomes


more accurate. However, there is computational cost associated with
a finer mesh
mesh.
Obtaining an optimal mesh requires the following:
Having criteria to determine if a mesh is adequate.
Investing
I
ti more elements
l
t only
l where
h
needed.
d d

Performing these tasks manually is cumbersome and inexact:


The user would have to manually refine the mesh, resolve, and compare
results
lt with
ith previous
i
solutions.
l ti

Mechanical has convergence controls to automate adaptive mesh


refinement to a user-specified level of accuracy.
Convergence controls cannot be used on all result items.

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Convergence

Customer Training Material

To use this feature select a result item RMB and insert Convergence:
Select max/min value for convergence and allowable change.
In the Solution branch details input the max number of refinement loops.

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Convergence

Customer Training Material

After the solution is complete one can view the


results and the last mesh (symbols in the tree
indicate success or failure to converge):
The mesh is refined only where needed (see below)
below).
The Convergence branch shows the trend for each
refinement loop.

Convergence
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Convergence & Scoping

Customer Training Material

A useful technique to avoid stress singularities when using


convergence is to scope results away from them.
If the singularity region is not of interest, one can scope results on
selected part(s) or surface(s) and add convergence controls to those
results only:
Provides control on where to perform mesh refinement.
Ignores areas of artificially high stresses which are not of interest.
Example:
Possible stress singularity

Region of interest

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Convergence & Scoping Example

Customer Training Material

Convergence controls
added to the entire model.
Geometric discontinuity
causes a stress singularity
causing divergence.
Solution becomes very
costly by including the
stress singularity.

Convergence controls on
scoped results allows
adaptive refinement only in
user-specified locations.
Provides more control
over the mesh and the
adaptive solution.
Accurate stresses realized
in the region of interest.
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I. Workshop 8.1 Advanced Results Processing

Customer Training Material

Workshop 8.1 Results Processing


Goal:
A
Analyze
l
th
the mechanical
h i l arm shown
h
below
b l
and
d then
th use some off
the advanced postprocessing features to review the stress and
estimate the error associated with a default mesh.

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Customer Training Material

L t
Lecture
9
CAD & Parameters

Introduction to ANSYS
Mechanical
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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Chapter Overview

In this chapter, interoperability with CAD software as well as


parameters will be discussed.
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.

Customer Training Material

CAD Interoperability
Defining Parameters in Workbench
Using the Parameter Workspace
Updating CAD Parameters
Workshop 9-1

The capabilities
p
described in this section are generally
g
y applicable
pp
to
all ANSYS licenses. However, some CAD functionality are specific
to certain CAD software, so these will be designated accordingly.

Not all CAD software have the same features, so there are some
differences in CAD-related functionality which is supported in
Mechanical.

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A. CAD Interoperability

Customer Training Material

Numerous Geometry Interfaces are available for commercial CAD


systems:
For the latest information on CAD geometry interfaces and supported
platforms see the ANSYS Workbench Mechanical documentation.
Geometry Interface licenses can be run in reader mode for all licenses.
Geometry Interfaces can be run in plug-in mode for the CAD software listed
under
d Associative.
A
i ti
DesignModeler is the Workbench geometry application and supports all the
functions and capabilities listed for commercial CAD systems.
systems

Please note
note, not all import capabilities described here are available with all
CAD systems. Features depend on CAD capabilities and the support
provided through the CAD vendors API.

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CAD Interoperability

Customer Training Material

There are various items that can be


imported from supported CAD systems:
Geometry, Spot welds, Parameters,
Material properties, etc.

To access these import preferences use


the Geometry properties in the Project
schematic.
h
ti

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Geometry Import

Customer Training Material

Import solid, surface, or line bodies:


Assemblies with mixed solids and surfaces are
OK.
Select desired geometry type to filter import
import.
Cannot import a part with mixed solids and
surfaces.

Use Associativity:
Allows updating CAD geometry in Mechanical
without redefining material properties, loads,
supports, etc..

Smart CAD Update:


only modified components of a CAD assembly are
updated.

Local Coordinate systems:


Allows local CS from CAD models to import with
geometry See current documentation for CAD
geometry.
system support.
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Named Selections Import

Customer Training Material

If groups are defined in the CAD


package they can be imported as Named
Selections:
Groups containing the specified prefix
in their name are imported in the Named
Selection branch (default is NS)
NS ).
To import all groups leave the named
selection key field blank.

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Material Property Import

Customer Training Material

Material Properties: allow material


property import from supported CAD
systems (see the current documentation
f properties supported by various C
for
CAD
vendors.
Materials imported
p
from CAD will appear
pp
in the Engineering Data branch and will
be assigned to individual parts.
Note:
If the material type is changed in CAD,
p
this will be reflected in an update.
if the property values of the material
change in CAD, this will not update.
This prevents overwriting user-defined
values
l
in
i Mechanical.
M h i l

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

Parameter Import

Customer Training Material

Parametric CAD dimensions can be


imported into Mechanical:
When checked, CAD parameter names
containing the parameter key will be
imported into Mechanical.
To import all parameters leave the
parameter key field blank.
CAD parameters will appear in the Details
view for the part.

Note: CAD parameters are read


read only
only at
this point.

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B. Defining Parameters in Workbench


Input and output parameters are defined in
Mechanical by toggling the parameter flag on/off.
Click in the square and a blue P will appear,
i di ti that
indicating
th t this
thi quantity
tit can now be
b manipulated
i l t d
as a parameter.

Customer Training Material

Example of input parameters

Material properties are parameterized in the


engineering data application.

Example of output parameters

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Introduction to ANSYS Mechanical

C. Using the Parameter Workspace

Customer Training Material

Workbench Mechanical uses the Parameter Workspace to manage


parametric data from analysis and geometry sources.
Derived p
parameters and constants can be created and managed
g as
well.

Double click or RMB > Edit the


Parameter Set to access
parameters.

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. . . Using the Parameter Workspace

Customer Training Material

Parameter information is presented in a series of tables.


Outline: lists all input, output or derived parameters.
Property: lists information regarding the parameter highlighted in the
outline.

Table of DP
Outline
Table of Design Points: allows multiple
parameter configurations to be
prepared before solving
Properties

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. . . Using the Parameter Workspace

Customer Training Material

Example using design points: A CAD


dimension has been promoted to a WB
input parameter.
The stress in a particular region of the model is
promoted as an output parameter.
The mass of the geometry has also been
promoted to a parametric output.

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. . . Using the Parameter Workspace

Customer Training Material

Example . . .
Opening the parameter
workspace, the parameters can be
seen in the outline.

In the table of design


g points
p
3
new values are added to the
current CAD parameter value.

From the top menu Update


All Design Points is
selected.
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. . . Using the Parameter Workspace

Customer Training Material

Example . . .
The progress of the updates is
reflected in the table.
With updates complete various
charts can be created to investigate
the data.

Stress vs Fill
St
Fillett
Radius

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Using the Parameter Workspace

Customer Training Material

Additional processing in the parameter workspace:


Parameter Parallel Chart shows configuration of all parameters per DP

DP3
Each
E
h XY intersection
i t
ti
provides
id a snapshot
h t off all
ll
parameters for a particular DP
DP2
Horizontal, colored lines
represent design points.

DP0

DP1
Vertical (Y) lines
ep ese t parameters
pa a ete s
represent
(P1, P2, etc.).
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Using the Parameter Workspace

Customer Training Material

By highlighting parameters, different chart configurations can be selected.


With P1 highlighted notice the chart options
are with respect to this parameter
parameter.
After selecting (double click) the desired
chart, the outline can be configured for
p y
display.

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. . . Using the Parameter Workspace

Customer Training Material

As charts are created they are stored in


the outline window and can be retrieved
by highlighting them.

Using
g a RMB in various areas of the
chart users can Edit Properties . . . to
control colors, styles, symbols,
interpolation type, etc.
Legend, line display, background, etc..

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D. Updating CAD Parameters (From CAD)

Customer Training Material

Update From CAD (Project Schematic):


After modifying the CAD geometry you will need to RMB and Update
From CAD. This will update the Mechanical geometry to match the CAD
system.
Doing an Update, causes new geometry to be remeshed in Mechanical.
Note, you can simply Generate the mesh in Mechanical as well.

To allow bi-directional parametric


p
exchange the CAD parameters must be
promoted.

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. . . Updating CAD Parameters (From Workbench)

Customer Training Material

With CAD parameters promoted, they can be managed in the Parameter


Set section of Workbench.
Values modified, description added, expression entered, etc..

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. . . Updating CAD Parameters (From Workbench)

Customer Training Material

If CAD Parameter Changes are made in WB:


Refresh Project: causes CAD and Mechanical geometry
to update but does not re-mesh the FE model.
Update Project: CAD and Mechanical models update
and the FE model is re-meshed.

Notes on geometry updates:


Th
The magnitude
it d off loads
l d remain
i constant:
t t
Thus if pressure was applied on a surface and the surface area changes, the
pressure value remains the same but the total force applied will change.
The orientation of loads will not change:
g
If a load direction is specified using existing geometry, the direction of the
load will not change if the geometry changes.

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E. Workshop 9.1 Parameter Management

Customer Training Material

Workshop 9.1 Parameter Management


Goal:
Use the Workbench Parameter Workspace to setup multiple scenarios to
explore structural responses in the bracket shown. Material thickness
will be varied in the gusset with the bracket thickness held constant
then the process will be reversed.

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