timthereaper
Aerospace
- Nov 23, 2010
- 5
Hi all,
I talked with an analyst recently about modeling up a composite preform joint, and after all the case studies he's done he told me that the nearest to actual results he got was to use coincident shell elements with different properties. After doing some searches, I wasn't able to find anything on coincident elements being an acceptable or unacceptable practice. I'm somewhat new to FEA, but I've taken a couple classes on the mathematical theory. After thinking about it for a while, I can't say it's necessarily wrong to do it that way from the theory, but my engineering "spider sense" tells me something's not quite right. Has anyone had experience with this or can anyone elaborate/correct me about this method?
Thanks!
Tim
I talked with an analyst recently about modeling up a composite preform joint, and after all the case studies he's done he told me that the nearest to actual results he got was to use coincident shell elements with different properties. After doing some searches, I wasn't able to find anything on coincident elements being an acceptable or unacceptable practice. I'm somewhat new to FEA, but I've taken a couple classes on the mathematical theory. After thinking about it for a while, I can't say it's necessarily wrong to do it that way from the theory, but my engineering "spider sense" tells me something's not quite right. Has anyone had experience with this or can anyone elaborate/correct me about this method?
Thanks!
Tim