TAGGED: static-structural
-
-
March 21, 2021 at 7:50 pm
IqbalHaikal
SubscriberLet's say the temperature is 20C and -35C. I've already included the Isotropic secant coefficient of thermal expansion on the rail pad material properties. Do I need to match the steady-state thermal analysis system with a static structural analysis system in order to get the result?
March 22, 2021 at 2:15 ampeteroznewman
SubscribernSet the reference temperature for all the materials and the Environment Temperature in the Static Structural model to 20 C. Therefore, there is zero strain at 20 C.nApply a Thermal Condition to All Bodies of -35 C to see the thermal strain develop.nYou don't need to run a Steady State Thermal model to simulate a constant temperature load.nMarch 23, 2021 at 12:16 amIqbalHaikal
SubscriberHow to set reference temperature for all material and environment temperature to 20C?March 23, 2021 at 12:42 ampeteroznewman
SubscribernClick on the Static Structural branch of the Outline. The Environment Temperature is in the Details window.nIn Workbench, open the Engineering Data cell. On the material where you defined the Isotopic Secant Coefficient of Thermal Expansion, there is a column for Temperature.n
I recommend you read this blog before you build your model.nhttps://www.padtinc.com/blog/secant-or-instantaneous-cte-understanding-thermal-expansion-modeling-ansys-mechanical/n
March 23, 2021 at 8:13 pmIqbalHaikal
SubscriberI've already read the blog you suggested before. But I did not understand the coefficient of thermal expansion. The coefficient of thermal expansion depends on the temperature, right? Let's say I've already put the coefficient of thermal expansion for temperature 23C which is 0.000165 /C, can I use the same coefficient value for temperature 20C? Let's say my reference temperature is 23C and I want to observe the deformation at a temperature of 20C and -35C.March 23, 2021 at 10:29 pmIqbalHaikal
SubscriberI have a problem regarding this observation. When I observe deformation of the rubber rail pad at temperatures 20C and -35C, the deformation at temperatures -35C is higher than 20C. Supposedly the deformation at temperature -35C is lower than deformation 20C, do you have any idea how to solve this? nMarch 23, 2021 at 11:37 pmIqbalHaikal
SubscriberIs the support we applied will affect the deformation (at temperatures 20C and -35C) outcome?March 24, 2021 at 3:46 ampeteroznewman
SubscribernYes, the fixed support affects the deformation under a thermal condition.nThere is zero deformation at 20C because that is the reference temperature. There is only deformation at -35C, that is expected.nIf the CTE is a constant value, in other words, it is not temperature dependent, then you just need that one value and it is used for all temperatures. Most metals have an almost constant value of CTE between 20 C and -35 C.nMarch 24, 2021 at 5:58 amIqbalHaikal
SubscriberLet's say I need to observe deformation at a temperature -35C, -20C, 0C, 20C, and 52C. My reference temperature is 23C. So, I need to put 23C on the CTE engineering data cell and environment temperature at the static structural branch as a fixed. Then, I just change the temperature (-35C, -20C, 0C, 20C, and 52C) at thermal conditions. Am I right? nMarch 24, 2021 at 10:16 ampeteroznewman
SubscribernFor a constant value of CTE (not temperature dependent), yes, that is all you do.nMarch 24, 2021 at 9:34 pmIqbalHaikal
SubscriberHello Peter, do you have any ideas regarding this problem I have a problem regarding this observation. When I observe deformation of the rubber rail pad at temperatures 20C and -35C, the deformation at temperatures -35C is higher than 20C. Supposedly the deformation at temperature -35C is lower than deformation 20C, do you have any idea how to solve this??nMarch 24, 2021 at 11:35 pmpeteroznewman
SubscribernLet's say the CTE is 0.001/C and consider a 100 mm long piece of material and 23 C is the reference/environment temperature.nSet the temperature to 20C, which is a -3C change so the part shrinks by 0.3 mm.nSet the temperature to -35C, which is a -58C change so the part shrinks by 5.8 mmnThe deformation at -35C is larger than the deformation at 20C. This is the expected behavior.nnMarch 27, 2021 at 6:46 amIqbalHaikal
SubscriberI'm still stuck on this problem. Do you have any idea how to make sure the deformation at -35C is lower than the deformation at 20C. Let's say I want to put 23C as my reference temperature. Hope you can help me nViewing 12 reply threads- The topic ‘How to observe deformation with different temperature?’ is closed to new replies.
Ansys Innovation SpaceTrending discussionsTop Contributors-
3139
-
1007
-
923
-
858
-
792
Top Rated Tags© 2025 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.
-
The Ansys Learning Forum is a public forum. You are prohibited from providing (i) information that is confidential to You, your employer, or any third party, (ii) Personal Data or individually identifiable health information, (iii) any information that is U.S. Government Classified, Controlled Unclassified Information, International Traffic in Arms Regulators (ITAR) or Export Administration Regulators (EAR) controlled or otherwise have been determined by the United States Government or by a foreign government to require protection against unauthorized disclosure for reasons of national security, or (iv) topics or information restricted by the People's Republic of China data protection and privacy laws.