-
-
November 13, 2020 at 5:55 pmRameez_ul_HaqSubscriberAnd also, which one should be used where? An example for each case will be very much appreciated. Thank you.n
-
November 17, 2020 at 8:12 amRameez_ul_HaqSubscriberAnyone on this?n
-
November 19, 2020 at 9:10 amAshish KhemkaForum ModeratornPlease see if the following link helps:nnnRegards,nAshish Khemkan
-
November 25, 2020 at 5:42 amRameez_ul_HaqSubscriberThank you for attaching a link, but the content in that link unfortunately doesn't answer what I was looking for.nThe forum says that the foundation stiffness for an elastic support 'offers stiffness per unit area' but the foundation stiffness in elastic support is in the units of N/mm? for a face of a solid. The forum is dedicated for an APDL command to implement the elastic support, whereas I want to know the difference between if I will add the elastic support, as compare to if I add a spring support to the same face. nThank you.n
-
November 27, 2020 at 2:30 pmRameez_ul_HaqSubscriberNeed help on this one please?n
-
November 30, 2020 at 4:51 ampeteroznewmanSubscribernIf a Face has 64 nodes on it, then there will be 64 springs to ground created for the elastic support.nIf you add a spring to ground to the same face, there will be one spring created with a rigid spider to the face. However, the spider can be changed to deformable.nThe elastic support is always perpendicular to the face. A spring attached to a face can go in any direction.nThe elastic support spring rate is N/mm^3 while the spring rate is N/mmnThe spring can have damping, but the elastic support cannot.nThe spring can have a preload, but the elastic support cannot.nThe spring can be defined between two points, so it has a length. The elastic support is only defined as a spring rate.n
-
November 30, 2020 at 12:10 pmRameez_ul_HaqSubscriberthe elastic support makes the scoped face as rigid or deformable? Is there a way to change that?nHow can I input a correct foundation stiffness for the elastic support? Can you give an physical example for me of each to clearly percept in which case elastic support will proof to be fruitful and in which case spring connection can do the work?n
-
November 30, 2020 at 1:42 pmpeteroznewmanSubscribernRigid and Deformable only applies to a Spring. It doesn't apply to Elastic Support. Elastic Support is like Deformable in that no extra stiffness is added to the model in addition to the spring rate. nElastic Support is simply a a spring rate per unit area. If you had a face with an area of 16 mm^2 and you wanted a spring rate for the whole face of 2 N/mm then you would use an elastic support with a spring rate of 32 N/mm^3. If you edit the geometry and cut the face area in half, the elastic support will end up being equivalent to a single spring of 4 N/mm.nHere is a good example of an elastic support: /forum/discussion/19500/how-to-model-a-beam-on-elastic-foundationn
-
Viewing 7 reply threads
- The topic ‘What is the difference between Elastic Support & Ground-body Spring connection?’ is closed to new replies.
Ansys Innovation Space
Trending discussions
- Ayuda con Error: “Unable to access the source: EngineeringData”
- At least one body has been found to have only 1 element in at least 2 directions
- Error when opening saved Workbench project
- How to apply Compression-only Support?
- Geometric stiffness matrix for solid elements
- How to select the interface delamination surface of a laminate?
- Timestep range set for animation export
- Image to file in Mechanical is bugged and does not show text
- SMART crack under fatigue conditions, different crack sizes can’t growth
- Frictional No separation contact
Top Contributors
-
1281
-
591
-
544
-
524
-
366
Top Rated Tags
© 2024 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.
Ansys does not support the usage of unauthorized Ansys software. Please visit www.ansys.com to obtain an official distribution.