Nagi Elabbasi
Facebook Reality Labs
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2 mar 2012, 13:24 GMT-5
You can conceptually apply pre-strain via thermal expansion. Why not do a stationary solution instead of having to deal with these oscillations and damping?
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering
You can conceptually apply pre-strain via thermal expansion. Why not do a stationary solution instead of having to deal with these oscillations and damping?
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
3 mar 2012, 04:19 GMT-5
Hi
or perhaps turn off the inertial terms (if possible for your model) that would drop the rho*d^2_u_/dt^2 term and work in Quasi static. Often a "Continuation sweep in stationary is easier as then you are working not only "quasi" but "fully static" to the solver resolution
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
or perhaps turn off the inertial terms (if possible for your model) that would drop the rho*d^2_u_/dt^2 term and work in Quasi static. Often a "Continuation sweep in stationary is easier as then you are working not only "quasi" but "fully static" to the solver resolution
--
Good luck
Ivar
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Posted:
1 decade ago
5 mar 2012, 08:15 GMT-5
Hi Nagi and Ivar,
Nagi.
The truth is, I am not sure how to successfully add a static step to a transient model. I know that you can add a static step and use the results for the start of the temporal study, but I am having some problems doing it.
Do you happen to know of an example of such a model? I have had a good look but I cant find one.
Ivar,
Thats a good suggestion, I will have a look if its possible and what effects it has later.
Perhaps one of you would be kind enough to create a simple static>temporal model for me? I would then create a model exchange from this with as many details as I can add as I think a lot of people have asked a similar question.
Thank you for your help with this.
Rob
Hi Nagi and Ivar,
Nagi.
The truth is, I am not sure how to successfully add a static step to a transient model. I know that you can add a static step and use the results for the start of the temporal study, but I am having some problems doing it.
Do you happen to know of an example of such a model? I have had a good look but I cant find one.
Ivar,
Thats a good suggestion, I will have a look if its possible and what effects it has later.
Perhaps one of you would be kind enough to create a simple static>temporal model for me? I would then create a model exchange from this with as many details as I can add as I think a lot of people have asked a similar question.
Thank you for your help with this.
Rob
Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
5 mar 2012, 14:40 GMT-5
Hi
I'mnot behind my COMSOL Ws just now, but previously (and I hope it's still true for v4.2a, I used to load a buckling example, that is (was) a combination of a statioanry analysis + eigenfrequency (set for buckling) and then looked at the way COMSOL linked then. I have also noted, that if you chain statioanry + transient, and hen do a create default solver sequence, COMOSL set the two up for a coupled analysis, with a stored solution in the middle and transient initial conditions set to the stored solution. What remains often confusing is that you get 2 data set, and the order are not always the one you expext, but by looking at the references one quickly finds out which is the stationary (solved solution) and which is the second transient case
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
I'mnot behind my COMSOL Ws just now, but previously (and I hope it's still true for v4.2a, I used to load a buckling example, that is (was) a combination of a statioanry analysis + eigenfrequency (set for buckling) and then looked at the way COMSOL linked then. I have also noted, that if you chain statioanry + transient, and hen do a create default solver sequence, COMOSL set the two up for a coupled analysis, with a stored solution in the middle and transient initial conditions set to the stored solution. What remains often confusing is that you get 2 data set, and the order are not always the one you expext, but by looking at the references one quickly finds out which is the stationary (solved solution) and which is the second transient case
--
Good luck
Ivar
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Posted:
1 decade ago
6 mar 2012, 05:58 GMT-5
Hi Ivar,
I think I better understand now.
I think I will create a very simple static-transient study with a very quick solution time. That way I hope to very quickly see whats going on with the results.
I had hoped that you could choose which loads/BC apply to which step, but that does not appear to be true.
For example,
If I have a static-transient study and the static study only looks at a prescribed displacement, it would be nice if I could select that load case (the prescribed displacement) and say ONLY SOLVE FOR STATIONARY. I did originally think that I could do this in the Equation option of each load/BC.
Or am I perhaps missing something.
It would appear that using your idea Ivar I will need to select and deselect BC's/loads for different steps. As in, only select stationary prescribed displacement, solve, deselect stationary displacement, select BC's for transient study, solve.
I will try to get to my Comsol machine later, but most of today is in a deep dark lab in the basement (I think all labs are like this!)
Thanks for keeping on helping me with this, we will get there in the end!
Rob
Hi Ivar,
I think I better understand now.
I think I will create a very simple static-transient study with a very quick solution time. That way I hope to very quickly see whats going on with the results.
I had hoped that you could choose which loads/BC apply to which step, but that does not appear to be true.
For example,
If I have a static-transient study and the static study only looks at a prescribed displacement, it would be nice if I could select that load case (the prescribed displacement) and say ONLY SOLVE FOR STATIONARY. I did originally think that I could do this in the Equation option of each load/BC.
Or am I perhaps missing something.
It would appear that using your idea Ivar I will need to select and deselect BC's/loads for different steps. As in, only select stationary prescribed displacement, solve, deselect stationary displacement, select BC's for transient study, solve.
I will try to get to my Comsol machine later, but most of today is in a deep dark lab in the basement (I think all labs are like this!)
Thanks for keeping on helping me with this, we will get there in the end!
Rob
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Posted:
1 decade ago
6 mar 2012, 06:36 GMT-5
Ivar,
You posted this some months ago....
"In V4 you add a stationary study-solving node before your time dependent node, and COMSOL will link them and use the stationary case as initial conditions (if you have tweaked your solver sequence, you should regenerate a new "default" one to get the solver sequence correctly updated by COMSOL.
Furthmore, if you use the variable "t" in some of your BC's or elsewhere, it will not be defined for the stationary solving case. My workaround is to define a Global Parameter t = 0[s] and set it to the first, or any convenient time step value."
I think the last part is the key, the global parameter t=0.
So any BC/load which has "t" will not be used in the static step? That could make life very easy indeed.
Thanks,
Rob
Ivar,
You posted this some months ago....
"In V4 you add a stationary study-solving node before your time dependent node, and COMSOL will link them and use the stationary case as initial conditions (if you have tweaked your solver sequence, you should regenerate a new "default" one to get the solver sequence correctly updated by COMSOL.
Furthmore, if you use the variable "t" in some of your BC's or elsewhere, it will not be defined for the stationary solving case. My workaround is to define a Global Parameter t = 0[s] and set it to the first, or any convenient time step value."
I think the last part is the key, the global parameter t=0.
So any BC/load which has "t" will not be used in the static step? That could make life very easy indeed.
Thanks,
Rob