tianle
Mechanical
- Dec 19, 2006
- 14
I've met a problem with ABAQUS.
In fully coupled thermal-stress analysis (or just simple heat transfer analysis), there's a phenomenon called
"Spurious oscillation", which is stated in ABAQUS/Doc as below:
Spurious oscillations due to small time increments
In transient analysis with second-order elements there is a relationship between the minimum usable time increment and the element size. If time increments smaller than this value are used in a mesh of second-order elements, spurious oscillations can appear in the solution, in particular in the vicinity of boundaries with rapid temperature changes. These oscillations are nonphysical and may cause problems if temperature-dependent material properties are present. In transient analyses using first-order elements the heat capacity terms are lumped, which eliminates such oscillations but can lead to locally inaccurate solutions for small time increments. If smaller time increments are required, a finer mesh should be used in regions where the temperature changes rapidly.
I frequently encountered this problem and because my model is for 3D-fully coupled thermal-stress analysis, the mesh size can't be too small in consideration of computation cost.
Anyone can help me?
Thanks a lot!
In fully coupled thermal-stress analysis (or just simple heat transfer analysis), there's a phenomenon called
"Spurious oscillation", which is stated in ABAQUS/Doc as below:
Spurious oscillations due to small time increments
In transient analysis with second-order elements there is a relationship between the minimum usable time increment and the element size. If time increments smaller than this value are used in a mesh of second-order elements, spurious oscillations can appear in the solution, in particular in the vicinity of boundaries with rapid temperature changes. These oscillations are nonphysical and may cause problems if temperature-dependent material properties are present. In transient analyses using first-order elements the heat capacity terms are lumped, which eliminates such oscillations but can lead to locally inaccurate solutions for small time increments. If smaller time increments are required, a finer mesh should be used in regions where the temperature changes rapidly.
I frequently encountered this problem and because my model is for 3D-fully coupled thermal-stress analysis, the mesh size can't be too small in consideration of computation cost.
Anyone can help me?
Thanks a lot!