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Tutorial 3 2005

This tutorial will model a uniaxial rod and simple beam as elastic bodies using FEMAP. Two loading cases will be analyzed: 1) axial load with equal forces applied on the right end in the x-direction, and 2) bending load with equal transverse forces applied on the right end in the y-direction. The model will have 81 nodes along the length and 17 nodes along the height, with compatible nodes merged before analysis. Von Mises stress, normal and shear stresses will be examined for each loading case.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views6 pages

Tutorial 3 2005

This tutorial will model a uniaxial rod and simple beam as elastic bodies using FEMAP. Two loading cases will be analyzed: 1) axial load with equal forces applied on the right end in the x-direction, and 2) bending load with equal transverse forces applied on the right end in the y-direction. The model will have 81 nodes along the length and 17 nodes along the height, with compatible nodes merged before analysis. Von Mises stress, normal and shear stresses will be examined for each loading case.

Uploaded by

Charanjit Singh
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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FEMAP Tutorial 3 In this tutorial, the uniaxial rod and simple beam will be modeled as elastic bodies, rather

than using fixed supports or rollers on the left boundary. You will first construct the uniaxial rod, and then adapt this structure to represent a simple beam.

Two cases will be considered in FEMAP: 1. Axial load with equal forces on all nodes on the right boundary

2. Bending modeled with equal transverse forces on the right boundary

The length (L1) of the support is 1.5 inches, and the length (L2) of the bar/beam is 6 inches. The height (h1) is 3 inches, and the height (h2) is 1 inch. The thickness is 0.25 inches, and the applied load (P) is 5,000 lbs. The bar is made of AISI 4130 steel which 1

has material properties of Youngs Modulus, E = 29 x 106 psi, Poissons ratio, = 0.32, and weight density, = 7.33 x 10-4 lb/in3. Follow the same procedures for geometry, materials, and properties as in previous tutorials. This analysis is going to utilize membrane elements again, and it will also use the same mesh sizing for the bar/beam (i.e. 80 elements along the length of the beam, and 16 elements along the height, or 81 and 17 nodes along each direction respectively). The support mesh size will have 20 elements along the length, and 48 elements along the height (i.e. 21 nodes, and 49 nodes respectively). In tutorial 1 compatibility between nodes was mentioned. For additional information refer to tutorial 1. Remember that each super element has its own set of nodes. Therefore, the common boundary (line) between the two super elements will have two sets of nodes (one from each super element) that each occupies the same point in space. However these common nodes must be converted to one unique node point so that compatibility is achieved. To perform this function, perform the following steps: Tools.Check.Coincident Nodes Entity Selection.Select All OK Check/Merge Coincident Maximum Distance to Merge (0.001) Options Merge Coincident Entities (Check) OK At this point the model should look like:

After you complete this step, a message should appear on the gray bar below the main window informing you how many nodes were merged (17 in this case)

The loads will be applied using the same process as in previous tutorials. The axial loading case will have a 5000 lb load distributed evenly on the nodes of the right boundary in the x direction. The transverse loading case will have a 5000 lb load distributed evenly along the right boundary in the y direction. (This results in approximately 294.12 lbs per node.) The constraints will be applied to the supports left boundary. Fix each node in the x and y directions, leaving the rotational directions free to move (Pinned). Model Analysis The first loading case results should look similar to these: VonMises:

Sigma XX:

Sigma YY:

Sigma XY:

The second loading case results should look similar to these: VonMises:

Sigma XX:

Sigma YY:

Sigma XY:

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