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I impose the deflection "f" to close the gap, but the analysis not converged
Can you help me?
Thank you
I impose the deflection "f" to close the gap, but the analysis not converged
Can you help me?
Thank you
This looks like it might have a singularity requiring isolate for exclusion. Can you give a few more details on how you setup the enforced displacement? Is it on a point or edge? Is the model 2D? How does this relate to an actual physical test? Could you actually do this in a test lab? If so how would that be done?
The enforced displacement is a section, it a 3d model I have not a phisical test
Suggested technique to enforce the gap closed as you indicate. Use at own risk.
This a technique when enforcing rotation on 3D because 3D elements only have translational DOF. (degrees of freedom)
Keep in mind strain results are logarithmic for large displacement.
https://support.ptc.com/help/creo/creo_pma/r10.0/usascii/index.html#page/simulate/simulate/lg_deform_strainmeas.html
1. Coordinate system at center of rotation
2. Point on coordinate system
3. rigid link from moving section to Point
4. Simple 2 point spring from Point to anywhere. (very low stiffness)
5. Constraint on the point to rotate the section the amount needed to close the gap. (may need to adjust the amount, radians or degrees)
6. Enable large displacements and enough steps to allow convergence (I show 21 steps, or 5% increments)
How is this the solution?
It would seem your multi-pass (MPA) analysis settings were selected to converge on a measure with the maximum polynomial set to 4 and the convergence percentage identified was not met. I would recommend running the SPA (Single-Pass Adaptive) first to see how it solves, and then if you require convergence to be demonstrated, re-run your MPA study but increase the maximum polynomial order to 7 or 8 (even 9 since it looks like a fairly simple, single part analysis).
SPA analysis is actually very robust, and should solve more quickly as well. Unless you require demonstration of convergence, SPA would be the approach to use more often.
I hope this helps!
Hello,
Couple of suggestion :