iam92008
Mechanical
- Dec 2, 2003
- 6
Hello All,
I'm modelling large deflections of a thin-walled cylinder (0.25m dia, 0.1m long, 0.005m thick) under symmetric 'pinching' forces (as if the cylinder was squeezed between two platens radially). The nonlinear (geometric and material) statics analyses I've attempted seem to get hung up (ie. stops at load step 25 of 40) as the cross-section deforms into a flat elliptical shape.
Question: Could the problem be that the geometry is experiencing a snap-thru?
Follow-up question 1: If yes to question above, should I perform a linear (I_DEAS 10 NX does not have non-linear buckling capabilities) buckling analysis to find the critical load and buckled shape?
Follow-up question 2: How do I save the geometric and FEM deformed model resulting from the buckling analysis so that I can continue the non-linear statics analysis?
Thanks for your help.
Regards,
Peter.
I'm modelling large deflections of a thin-walled cylinder (0.25m dia, 0.1m long, 0.005m thick) under symmetric 'pinching' forces (as if the cylinder was squeezed between two platens radially). The nonlinear (geometric and material) statics analyses I've attempted seem to get hung up (ie. stops at load step 25 of 40) as the cross-section deforms into a flat elliptical shape.
Question: Could the problem be that the geometry is experiencing a snap-thru?
Follow-up question 1: If yes to question above, should I perform a linear (I_DEAS 10 NX does not have non-linear buckling capabilities) buckling analysis to find the critical load and buckled shape?
Follow-up question 2: How do I save the geometric and FEM deformed model resulting from the buckling analysis so that I can continue the non-linear statics analysis?
Thanks for your help.
Regards,
Peter.