Hello Lars Tiedemann
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Posted:
1 decade ago
21 ott 2011, 00:37 GMT-4
Thanks for posting this - very helpful. However, I'm having a little bit of trouble using this technique to extract the effective mass for radial contour modes in a ring. The effective mass values I get are several orders of magnitude smaller than they should be. (I expected ~10^-12 kg, but I got ~10^-37 kg)
I got reasonable values for effective mass for a big block on the end of a cantilever, but the same technique doesn't seem to work for the ring. Any ideas on how to tweak it so I get the right values?
Thanks for posting this - very helpful. However, I'm having a little bit of trouble using this technique to extract the effective mass for radial contour modes in a ring. The effective mass values I get are several orders of magnitude smaller than they should be. (I expected ~10^-12 kg, but I got ~10^-37 kg)
I got reasonable values for effective mass for a big block on the end of a cantilever, but the same technique doesn't seem to work for the ring. Any ideas on how to tweak it so I get the right values?
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
21 ott 2011, 02:38 GMT-4
Hi
you can also calculate the total mass, by integrating solid.rho over the model, and divide the square of the modal participation factor by the total mass, this gives you the relative participation factor. Based upon the fact that the total sum of all modal participation factor should sum up to the total mass.
If you do not get close enough to the total value, it might be that you are not considering enough modes
One thing is unfortunately still missing: the rotational Rx,Ry,Rz participation factors, summing to the inertia, this is for me the no + shortcoming of COMSOL in Structural all other FEM programmes have these normalisation included. And doing via matlab for a reasonable engineering model is useless, far too large matrices to handle. I hope it will come in a future version ;)
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
you can also calculate the total mass, by integrating solid.rho over the model, and divide the square of the modal participation factor by the total mass, this gives you the relative participation factor. Based upon the fact that the total sum of all modal participation factor should sum up to the total mass.
If you do not get close enough to the total value, it might be that you are not considering enough modes
One thing is unfortunately still missing: the rotational Rx,Ry,Rz participation factors, summing to the inertia, this is for me the no + shortcoming of COMSOL in Structural all other FEM programmes have these normalisation included. And doing via matlab for a reasonable engineering model is useless, far too large matrices to handle. I hope it will come in a future version ;)
--
Good luck
Ivar