HPsteam
Mechanical
- Aug 21, 2014
- 16
Hi.
I am working for a small engineering company where we design steel tanks and exchanges on daily basis. All thermodynamic and mechanical calculations are done in house. Every once in a while, we will make an FRP tank for use in highly corrosive environments. At that point mechanical calculations are part of fabricators scope (do not have our own shop) and we go by whatever they say. No known structural issues on equipment supplied to us since we started working with them.
We recently fabricated packed tower and supplied hand calcs with it. We are in a situation now, that customer is asking for FEA analysis of the design as well, i guess as a proof of hand calculations. I am reading everything i can find online regarding this issue, and it seems that the consensus is that every layer would need to be modeled separately and its properties properly assigned. For hand calculations, material has been assigned with certain properties and was taken as isotropic material. Calculations were pretty much straight forward after that. I am assuming that the mechanical properties of the material were taken from the actual test of their process.
My question is following: During FEA analysis, how close can this approximation be to the results obtained by modeling the right way? I understand all of the issues with composite materials and actual fabrication.
IN any case, we are going to hire third party engineering company to do this for us as we do not have experience in this kind of FEA analysis. I am planing on performing FEA (SolidWorks) on my end as a learning tool, so i am wondering if i should go ahead and design the tower in all the little details, or just take it as isotropic and go with it?
any help is appreciated. thank you
I am working for a small engineering company where we design steel tanks and exchanges on daily basis. All thermodynamic and mechanical calculations are done in house. Every once in a while, we will make an FRP tank for use in highly corrosive environments. At that point mechanical calculations are part of fabricators scope (do not have our own shop) and we go by whatever they say. No known structural issues on equipment supplied to us since we started working with them.
We recently fabricated packed tower and supplied hand calcs with it. We are in a situation now, that customer is asking for FEA analysis of the design as well, i guess as a proof of hand calculations. I am reading everything i can find online regarding this issue, and it seems that the consensus is that every layer would need to be modeled separately and its properties properly assigned. For hand calculations, material has been assigned with certain properties and was taken as isotropic material. Calculations were pretty much straight forward after that. I am assuming that the mechanical properties of the material were taken from the actual test of their process.
My question is following: During FEA analysis, how close can this approximation be to the results obtained by modeling the right way? I understand all of the issues with composite materials and actual fabrication.
IN any case, we are going to hire third party engineering company to do this for us as we do not have experience in this kind of FEA analysis. I am planing on performing FEA (SolidWorks) on my end as a learning tool, so i am wondering if i should go ahead and design the tower in all the little details, or just take it as isotropic and go with it?
any help is appreciated. thank you