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Shell Coating Solids (Strain Gage Simulation)

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HDFEA

Mechanical
Joined
May 2, 2003
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9
Location
US
Hi,
I'm shell coating solid finite element geometry (parabolic tetrahedron elements)to do some correlation work with strain gage test data. Is there a good rule of thumb for what thickness the thin-shell element should be when you're trying to simulate a strain gage? What experiences have you had with this technique? Any other FE techniques available to get at surface strains? I'm running I-DEAS/UGS 11m2.
 
If you have sufficient mesh density then the extrapolated element nodal stress should equal the surface stress. I avoid shell coating since it adds unneccessary degrees of freedom to my models and is another source of modeling errors. Instead I just probe a consistent node where my strain gauge should be.

If you have to surface coat , then just anything really thin, like 0.01 mm and ignore any software warnings about ill-conditioned matrix.

Principal - General FEA Consulting Services
 
Thanks for the information. I was getting singularites due to the very thin shell (0.001 inch thick) that I was using to coat the solids (as you mentioned).
 
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