mid surface meshing-property

Altair Forum User
Altair Forum User
Altair Employee
edited October 2020 in Community Q&A

why do we need to assign thickness for a  mid surface  mesh ? varying or constant

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Answers

  • Altair Forum User
    Altair Forum User
    Altair Employee
    edited May 2014

    Since we are creating the 2D elements for a mid surface, to represent the exact geometry the thickness has to be assigned.

  • Altair Forum User
    Altair Forum User
    Altair Employee
    edited May 2014

    assuming that you might know why we do mesh at mid-surface rather mesh it on the outer or inner surface, i directly come to ur question about thickness. 

     

    1. Our meshing should always represent the geometry because the stiffness matrix varies with respective to the geometry, shape and size(in x,y,z ) on which the stress and defections values are based. 

     

    2. irrespective of element type Software requires all 3 dimensions to run an analysis so, For 1D elements, it contains the information of only 1 dimension(say x) but later while defining the cross-sectional parameters we provide the information of other 2 dimensions (y and z). similarly For 2D elements, it contains info of 2 dimensions say x and y, now while assigning thickness we r providing z dimension info. so if u skip defining value even in 1 dimension syntax will fail to execute the analysis request. 

     

    there are some rules to be followed before judging the right element type... but it is irrelevant to the question you u posted so, i'm not discussing it here..

     

    hope it was clear ! . 

  • Altair Forum User
    Altair Forum User
    Altair Employee
    edited May 2014

    assuming that you might know why we do mesh at mid-surface rather mesh it on the outer or inner surface, i directly come to ur question about thickness. 

     

    1. Our meshing should always represent the geometry because the stiffness matrix varies with respective to the geometry, shape and size(in x,y,z ) on which the stress and defections values are based. 

     

    2. irrespective of element type Software requires all 3 dimensions to run an analysis so, For 1D elements, it contains the information of only 1 dimension(say x) but later while defining the cross-sectional parameters we provide the information of other 2 dimensions (y and z). similarly For 2D elements, it contains info of 2 dimensions say x and y, now while assigning thickness we r providing z dimension info. so if u skip defining value even in 1 dimension syntax will fail to execute the analysis request. 

     

    there are some rules to be followed before judging the right element type... but it is irrelevant to the question you u posted so, i'm not discussing it here..

     

    hope it was clear ! . 

    perfectly well   image/emoticons/default_smile.png' alt=':)' srcset='/emoticons/smile@2x.png 2x' width='20' height='20'>

  • Altair Forum User
    Altair Forum User
    Altair Employee
    edited May 2014

    perfectly well   image/emoticons/default_smile.png' alt=':)' srcset='/emoticons/smile@2x.png 2x' width='20' height='20'>

    come up with more questions ... image/emoticons/default_smile.png' alt=':)' srcset='/emoticons/smile@2x.png 2x' width='20' height='20'>

  • Altair Forum User
    Altair Forum User
    Altair Employee
    edited August 2019

    why we do mesh at mid-surface rather mesh it on the outer or inner surface and add the thickness to it?

  • Altair Forum User
    Altair Forum User
    Altair Employee
    edited August 2019

    why we do mesh at mid-surface rather mesh it on the outer or inner surface and add the thickness to it?

  • tinh
    tinh Altair Community Member
    edited August 2019

    If you mesh on outer surfs, you need to set z-off to make outer of mesh to match the surfs.

    If you mesh on midsurface, don't need z-off