Book Image

Practical Finite Element Simulations with SOLIDWORKS 2022

By : Khameel B. Mustapha
Book Image

Practical Finite Element Simulations with SOLIDWORKS 2022

By: Khameel B. Mustapha

Overview of this book

SOLIDWORKS is a dominant computer-aided design (CAD) software for the 3D modeling, designing, and analysis of components. This book helps you get to grips with SOLIDWORKS Simulation, which is a remarkable and integral part of SOLIDWORKS predominantly deployed for advanced product performance assessment and virtual prototyping. With this book, you'll take a hands-on approach to learning SOLIDWORKS Simulation with the help of step-by-step guidelines on various aspects of the simulation workflow. You'll begin by learning about the requirements for effective simulation of parts and components, along with the idealization of physical components and their representation with finite element models. As you progress through the book, you'll find exercises at the end of each chapter, and you'll be able to download the geometry models used in all the chapters from GitHub. Finally, you’ll discover how to set up finite element simulations for the static analysis of components under various types of loads, and with different types of materials, from simple isotropic to composite, and different boundary conditions. By the end of this SOLIDWORKS 2022 book, you'll be able to conduct basic and advanced static analyses with SOLIDWORKS Simulation and have practical knowledge of how to best use the family of elements in the SOLIDWORKS Simulation library.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Section 1: An Introduction to SOLIDWORKS Simulation
6
Section 2: SOLIDWORKS Simulation with Shell and Solid Elements
10
Section 3: Advanced SOLIDWORKS Simulation with Complex Material and Loading Behavior

An overview of the analysis of composite structures

Before we go into the case study for this chapter, it helps to have some background knowledge about composite materials. Engineering materials such as metals, ceramics, and polymers/elastomers are isotropic by nature. Although each of these families of materials is widely used in their natural isotropic form for many applications, each has its pros and cons. For instance, solid metals (as opposed to liquid metals such as gallium and mercury) are endowed with high stiffness and have high deformability, but are heavy and prone to fatigue failure. Ceramics also have high stiffness, but they are brittle. On the other hand, polymers/elastomers have good corrosion and wear-resistance properties, but they have very low stiffness and temperature-dependent properties. Put together, this indicates that no single class of material is superior under all possible desirable functional working conditions [1] (see the Further reading section at...