eyeguy
Bioengineer
- Nov 23, 2006
- 12
Hello,
I've lurked here for a while, but finally signed up to ask a question. I'm not sure if it's easy/hard/impossible, but I seem to be stumped with a relatively simple problem:
I'm modeling the tissue of an eye in ANSYS using a mesh generated from MRI data (therefore no mapped meshing). I need to apply a pressure to the interior surface of the eye to simulate the intraocular pressure (think of air inside a balloon pushing outwards). My problem is that doing something like an nsel with the ext component grabs nodes on both the interior and exterior of the eye model, rather than just the interior. Currently the only way I can think of doing it is with a painstaking series of math-based subtractions, but that's neither quick nor accurate. Any ideas?
I've lurked here for a while, but finally signed up to ask a question. I'm not sure if it's easy/hard/impossible, but I seem to be stumped with a relatively simple problem:
I'm modeling the tissue of an eye in ANSYS using a mesh generated from MRI data (therefore no mapped meshing). I need to apply a pressure to the interior surface of the eye to simulate the intraocular pressure (think of air inside a balloon pushing outwards). My problem is that doing something like an nsel with the ext component grabs nodes on both the interior and exterior of the eye model, rather than just the interior. Currently the only way I can think of doing it is with a painstaking series of math-based subtractions, but that's neither quick nor accurate. Any ideas?