Nov 13, 2020 #1 John1988 Materials Joined Mar 16, 2020 Messages 10 Location IE Hi, I am modelling an axisymmetric cylinder. (I am modelling 1/2 the cylinder) Should I apply the total pressure load that the piper experiences in real life or divide it by two? Any help would be appreciated.
Hi, I am modelling an axisymmetric cylinder. (I am modelling 1/2 the cylinder) Should I apply the total pressure load that the piper experiences in real life or divide it by two? Any help would be appreciated.
Nov 13, 2020 1 #2 FEA way Mechanical Joined Nov 13, 2018 Messages 5,180 Location PL You should apply the total pressure in such case. Upvote 0 Downvote
Nov 13, 2020 Thread starter #3 John1988 Materials Joined Mar 16, 2020 Messages 10 Location IE Further to this... my model is actually cyclic symmetric, I model 1/5th the cylinder. (I simplified it to axisymmetric) I apply the total pressure to the inner surface of the 1/5 model. Question 1) is this still correct to apply total pressure for a cyclic symmetric model? Question 2) I also apply an axial stretch load to the end of the cylinder. Should I divide this load by 5 or not? Thanks for your help. Upvote 0 Downvote
Further to this... my model is actually cyclic symmetric, I model 1/5th the cylinder. (I simplified it to axisymmetric) I apply the total pressure to the inner surface of the 1/5 model. Question 1) is this still correct to apply total pressure for a cyclic symmetric model? Question 2) I also apply an axial stretch load to the end of the cylinder. Should I divide this load by 5 or not? Thanks for your help.
Nov 14, 2020 #4 Mustaine3 Mechanical Joined Feb 25, 2015 Messages 1,645 Location FR Pressure is per area, so yes, you apply the full value. With a force you only apply the fraction when using cyclic or plane symmetry. But the full value when doing axisymmetric analysis, since everything is seen as 360° model. Upvote 0 Downvote
Pressure is per area, so yes, you apply the full value. With a force you only apply the fraction when using cyclic or plane symmetry. But the full value when doing axisymmetric analysis, since everything is seen as 360° model.
Nov 14, 2020 #5 FEA way Mechanical Joined Nov 13, 2018 Messages 5,180 Location PL In such cases it’s best to perform a simple test and check whether the results of the full and cyclic symmetry model are the same. Upvote 0 Downvote
In such cases it’s best to perform a simple test and check whether the results of the full and cyclic symmetry model are the same.