Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2011年12月12日 GMT-5 16:10
Hi
I would propose to use assembly mode and then apply a continuity by hand, but the best is to look at the mdel of a crack in the model library (at least there were one in 3.5)
--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi
I would propose to use assembly mode and then apply a continuity by hand, but the best is to look at the mdel of a crack in the model library (at least there were one in 3.5)
--
Good luck
Ivar
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2012年6月3日 GMT-4 15:20
Have you found a solution to creating a crack in a plate?
Have you found a solution to creating a crack in a plate?
Nagi Elabbasi
Facebook Reality Labs
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2012年6月4日 GMT-4 11:58
One way is to partition the plate into two separate geometries along the direction of the crack, use Assembly instead of Union as a final geometry operation and add a Boundary Similarity model coupling between the two parts of the plate that are not cracked. The Boundary Similarity will couple the displacements of the two sides. There is, as Ivar pointed out, a basic 2D crack example in the documentation. In that example the crack is along a line of symmetry so the geometry was easier to define.
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering
One way is to partition the plate into two separate geometries along the direction of the crack, use Assembly instead of Union as a final geometry operation and add a Boundary Similarity model coupling between the two parts of the plate that are not cracked. The Boundary Similarity will couple the displacements of the two sides. There is, as Ivar pointed out, a basic 2D crack example in the documentation. In that example the crack is along a line of symmetry so the geometry was easier to define.
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering