hky20
Student
- Aug 23, 2020
- 5
Hello!
I am curious about how, in a system, non-local effects from the rest of the system are accounted for when modelling the structural behaviour of an individual subsystem.
Say our system is the transmission system of an aircraft engine, which consists of subsystems like the gearboxes, shafts, bearings, cases, and other miscellaneous support structures. Each of those subsystems would be designed by different teams, and they would need an analysis model of their subsystem, e.g. a FE model, to base their design decisions on. How would the tail bearing housing designer account for loads and displacements from its adjacent subsystems like the LP turbine, LP shaft, rear engine mount, etc. when devising his FE model?
The first method I can think of is to pass subsystem-subsystem interface loads to each subsystem. However, where do those loads come from? Also, what happens if a subsystem is not fully constrained in all DOFs, even if the system as a whole is? Do you just artificially constrain the remaining free DOFs at an arbitrary location in the subsystem model?
The second method I can think of is to use superelements, which I'm less informed about. I presume you can't just generate a single superelement representation for each subsystem and then pass them around individually to be plugged in to the ends of subsystem models, because the attachment nodes are different for each subsystem.
I am also curious about how/if the methods vary between solution types, e.g. static, dynamic, etc.
I am curious about how, in a system, non-local effects from the rest of the system are accounted for when modelling the structural behaviour of an individual subsystem.
Say our system is the transmission system of an aircraft engine, which consists of subsystems like the gearboxes, shafts, bearings, cases, and other miscellaneous support structures. Each of those subsystems would be designed by different teams, and they would need an analysis model of their subsystem, e.g. a FE model, to base their design decisions on. How would the tail bearing housing designer account for loads and displacements from its adjacent subsystems like the LP turbine, LP shaft, rear engine mount, etc. when devising his FE model?
The first method I can think of is to pass subsystem-subsystem interface loads to each subsystem. However, where do those loads come from? Also, what happens if a subsystem is not fully constrained in all DOFs, even if the system as a whole is? Do you just artificially constrain the remaining free DOFs at an arbitrary location in the subsystem model?
The second method I can think of is to use superelements, which I'm less informed about. I presume you can't just generate a single superelement representation for each subsystem and then pass them around individually to be plugged in to the ends of subsystem models, because the attachment nodes are different for each subsystem.
I am also curious about how/if the methods vary between solution types, e.g. static, dynamic, etc.