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3D Design

3D Design

Topics related to Ansys Discovery and Ansys SpaceClaim.

Discerning which boundary conditions are most accurate in modeling a wheelchair frame

    • Cayle
      Subscriber

      I'm a final year Mechanical engineering student. I am currently busy with my final year design project.

      I am designing a lever chain driven wheelchair. I have developed a line model in spaceclaim that incorporates the essential frame of the wheelchair, I then added circular and square beam elements to represent the cross sections of the wheelchair geometry. 


        The beam model was then exported to the ansys mechanical to be simulated. I applied a fixed boundary condition, with an edge designation, at the rear axles of the wheelchair and then applied a fixed boundary condition, point designation, at the front tubing where the caster wheels would attach to the frame of the wheelchair. I then applied a force where the user will sit on the wheelchair.    Now, the results of this static analysis were negated by my internal examiner, stating that " This completely deletes the possibility of there being different forces at the wheels or relative displacement between the wheels, like when the brakes are applied on an incline. It also means that moments can be resisted at the wheel locations, which is not necessarily true."   Please could you help me in assessing the correct boundary conditions to apply to account for the loads as stipulated in the statement above. Or, guide me to a solution which would offer a truer representation of the loads encompassed in a wheelchair.
        I've attached my files for the spaceclaim geometry if needed.   Any feedback would be greatly appreciated.


       




    • Aniket Chavan
      Forum Moderator

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    • peteroznewman
      Subscriber

      A "kinematic" connection to ground is one which provides no additional stiffness to the structure. That works perfectly when there are 3 points touching the ground. A body has exactly 6 degrees of freedom in space, so you need to create exactly 6 constraints. With three points, you can do that by fixing one point (A) in XYZ a second point (D) in XY and a third point (C) in Y leaving all rotations free. That is exactly 6 constraints.  If you have 4 wheels in contact with the ground, then the ground is effectively contributing to the stiffness of the frame. If you support a fourth point (B) in Y, that is one extra constraint for a total of 7.


      When you applied Fixed Support to four points, that controls both translation (XYZ) and rotation (RxRyRz) and is 24 constraints, which is way too many.


    • Cayle
      Subscriber

      That explanation makes so much more sense, Thank you so much.


      So in effect, I was over constraining my frame which would then portray an inaccurate solution to the static structural simulation?


       

    • Cayle
      Subscriber

      I would like to sincerely thank you for your proposed solution. I better understand where I was wrong in overconstraining the frame.

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