Ivar KJELBERG
COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2010年6月12日 GMT-4 07:10
Hi
well I'm not sure I understand your "rotation", there are ways to draw a circle around a geoemtry and "rotate freely" along this border (see the generator ACDC models) I'm not sure its 100% implemented in V4 yet, have to check
but what's the difference with estimating the CoG/CoR Inertia terms of a volume ? you get the "balancing directly without moving the objects, or have I missed a point ?
Have fun Comsoling
Ivar
Hi
well I'm not sure I understand your "rotation", there are ways to draw a circle around a geoemtry and "rotate freely" along this border (see the generator ACDC models) I'm not sure its 100% implemented in V4 yet, have to check
but what's the difference with estimating the CoG/CoR Inertia terms of a volume ? you get the "balancing directly without moving the objects, or have I missed a point ?
Have fun Comsoling
Ivar
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2010年6月17日 GMT-4 14:06
Rotation and balance sounds to me like you want to apply centrifugal loads and try to have them cancel out so your object is balanced.
You do this by applying a body force to the model, where the force is described as omega^2 * r * C * rho, where rho is the density, omega is the angular velocity and r is the radius from the center of rotation. C is some constant to take care of the units....
So you're not really "rotating" the model, but you're having COMSOL load the body as if it were rotating.
Depending on your situation, you can probably check your balance in a CAD package like SolidWorks without bothering to do any FEA work. Maybe not, though, depending on deflections and whatever else might happen.
-Jeff
Rotation and balance sounds to me like you want to apply centrifugal loads and try to have them cancel out so your object is balanced.
You do this by applying a body force to the model, where the force is described as omega^2 * r * C * rho, where rho is the density, omega is the angular velocity and r is the radius from the center of rotation. C is some constant to take care of the units....
So you're not really "rotating" the model, but you're having COMSOL load the body as if it were rotating.
Depending on your situation, you can probably check your balance in a CAD package like SolidWorks without bothering to do any FEA work. Maybe not, though, depending on deflections and whatever else might happen.
-Jeff