how to load pressure on the solid element?
Answers
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extract the faces of the element and apply suitably on the required surface
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In that case, what would be the property to assign to that surface? PSHELL? And thickness? I have checked that thickness influences results in this case.
Thank you in advance,
Pablo.
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Hi
Just apply a very thin thickness, bending will be neglectable
But it is faster and simpler to apply pressure directly to solid elems
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Hi,
¿And how can I apply these pressures directly to solids when I want to apply a field? As long as I know, if I choose a few solids elements from field selector, pressure is applied on the middle of the elements instead of on the external surface.
Thank you once again,
Pablo.
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Now from version 14.0 you can apply pressure by faces (no need to extract faces) & pressure acts on element normal direction.
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What I want to do in the end is applying a pressure (import from an ansys model) which is initially applied beneath a thin layer of 2D elements, created automatically when imported. But I have checked that, even it seems to be correctly configured, when I modify 2D elements properties, results (displacement plot) also change, a lot. F
I have used as 2D elements properties:
- PSHELL
- T=0.001 mm
- Material settings similar to steel and other property settings by default.
General appereance of results, when compared to the ansys one (which is checked), is very different so I suspect that this way of applying pressure is the main cause of the discordance. I would appreciate any kind of advice or suggestion.
Pablo.
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Yes this method applying pressure is not good I think. You should apply pressure directly on solid elems. If you cannot do it your self, send us your model, we could give a try
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I have been able to solve this problem introducing a very thin thickness as you said, and results are good enough. Finally the problem were material properties which depended on temperature. Thanks for the offer.
Pablo.
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