gio1
Automotive
- Jun 28, 2003
- 83
Hello
I am planning a FEA of a dynamic system which includes some steel coil springs, using an explicit solver.
Before starting the dynamic analysis I have done some static and free modal analyses on the spring FE models, to ensure that their stiffness and first natural frequency is similar to that quoted by the manufacturer. The springs have linear behaviour.
Surprisingly neither the stiffness or the frequency are close to the values in the specification sheet.
A quick check with classical calculations gives a stiffness which matches that quoted by the manufacturer. Measuraments also confirm this value and show a very linear behaviour throughout the stroke. FE static analyses give a value about 25% lower for all springs.
In the analysis one end of the coil is restrained and a displacement load is applied to the other end. The reaction force is then calculated.
The elastic modulus used is correct (steel - 208 GPa). The analysis is a linear one, solved in Nastran. As the actual spring behaviour is linear I think a linear static analysis is applicable.
I have repeated this analysis with 2 different FE models: one made of hexaedral elements, another made of second order tetrahedral elements, with adequate density in both cases, but the results are similar.
As for the first natural frequency, the free modal analysis (again, in Nastran) gives a value which is approximately 36% lower than that in the specification sheet. The density of the FE model was calculated to achieve the same mass of the actual spring (as measured).
In this case classical calculations do not agree with the spec sheet either, but give a value about 26% higher than the FEA (the same value is also confirmed by the EFUNDA spring calculator, based on classical analysis:
I don't understand this big discrepancy. Is there any big non-linear effect which I am neglecting and is compromising the analysis?
Thank you in advance for your help
I am planning a FEA of a dynamic system which includes some steel coil springs, using an explicit solver.
Before starting the dynamic analysis I have done some static and free modal analyses on the spring FE models, to ensure that their stiffness and first natural frequency is similar to that quoted by the manufacturer. The springs have linear behaviour.
Surprisingly neither the stiffness or the frequency are close to the values in the specification sheet.
A quick check with classical calculations gives a stiffness which matches that quoted by the manufacturer. Measuraments also confirm this value and show a very linear behaviour throughout the stroke. FE static analyses give a value about 25% lower for all springs.
In the analysis one end of the coil is restrained and a displacement load is applied to the other end. The reaction force is then calculated.
The elastic modulus used is correct (steel - 208 GPa). The analysis is a linear one, solved in Nastran. As the actual spring behaviour is linear I think a linear static analysis is applicable.
I have repeated this analysis with 2 different FE models: one made of hexaedral elements, another made of second order tetrahedral elements, with adequate density in both cases, but the results are similar.
As for the first natural frequency, the free modal analysis (again, in Nastran) gives a value which is approximately 36% lower than that in the specification sheet. The density of the FE model was calculated to achieve the same mass of the actual spring (as measured).
In this case classical calculations do not agree with the spec sheet either, but give a value about 26% higher than the FEA (the same value is also confirmed by the EFUNDA spring calculator, based on classical analysis:
I don't understand this big discrepancy. Is there any big non-linear effect which I am neglecting and is compromising the analysis?
Thank you in advance for your help