Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations KootK on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Linear Static Analysis using PCOMP Elements (NX 10 SIMULATION)

Status
Not open for further replies.
Oct 6, 2016
11
Hey there,



I was hoping someone with experience using PCOMP elements could help me out with my project.



So I have a small trapezoidal 'stiffener' sample (about 2.25" tall by 2" wide with a material thickness of about .45") that is to be compressed in unaxial load (strictly uniaxial)... The material used is orthrotropic (its a composite)... It's 3 layers of composite: outer 2 layers are carbon fiber and the middle is fiberglass...



So first I decided I would model the cross section as a line (no thickness) and then extrude that, and mesh it with shell elements... For the material, I decided I would use AUTODESK HELIOUS; you can input lamina values and ply layups and it will output the laminate's mechanical properties. So once I got the mechanical properties of the laminate I put those into NX as an orthrotropic material (i was not aware of NX Laminate or PCOMP when doing this at first)... Regardless, for whatever reason everytime I ran the simulation I kept getting error due to the Jacobian (2x2 error)... I believe it was a combination of the material and not a good mesh. Who knows.



So after more research online, I decided to use the PCOMP elements since it would allow me to build up my laminate by defining each ply (lamina) properties all in the NX simulation environment... It worked pretty smoothly except the results. I had to turn BAILOUT to -1 so I could tell the simulation to output results regardless of errors; and then once I saw the results, the Displacement was in the ballpark.. but the stress was not. Maybe I am looking at it wrong, but it only gives me stress PER PLY.. So do I take the average of each ply's stress to get my total stress calculation???



I just feel like I might be doing this whole thing wrong.. Can anyone give me advice or a tutorial if I am missing something..



OR is there another efficient way to do this because I am getting so frustrated!! lol.



Please let me know guys!

Thanks
 
 http://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=c0bd9b1d-c8dd-4a19-9893-70346d8883de&file=Capture.PNG
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor