BuckTU
Mechanical
- Mar 8, 2005
- 19
thread727-133514 said:How does a FEM program know when a pipe buckles, PART 1?
BuckTU (Mechanical) 5 Sep 05 5:05
Dear FEM users,
I have made a pipe FEM model from solid elements in Msc.Marc. If I axially compress this pipe, it will buckle.
But if you think about it…How does this FEM program know this?
This perfect pipe in FEM has a uniform geometry and material properties. This FEM model will only be subjected by a longitudinal or axial force on the outer pipe ends.
Why does this pipe buckle and why doesn't it deform plastically in one big flat disk?
Does a FEM program use an initial deformation?
Thanks in advance,
BuckTU
Oké, so only gwolf agrees that if a perfect pipe will compress in a flat disk...
thread727-133514 said:gwolf (Aeronautics) 5 Sep 05 9:45
The answer is that if you just perform a very large displacement analysis, it will flatten out into a disk. If there are any imperfections in your model, they will seed an unsymmetric displacement and buckling will follow shortly.
There are a number of ways to simulate buckling in FE but all boil down to some form of geometric imperfection be it localised mesh distortion or a long wavelength bend of small initial magnitude.
You can tackle this linearly using eigen-mode based buckling analyses or nonlinearly by actually including imperfections in the mesh.
In the case of Marc, I have little experience with this program but your question seems general rather than Marc-specific. I hope my comments shine some light on the subject.
but does someone know why a FEM program doesn't do this?[/color red] Without referring to any Euler or eigen value problems. What is the background of a FEM program, according to the pipe to disk problem.
Thanks in advance,
BuckTU