A major trend that Monica Schnitger sees from her perspective as senior vice
president of market analysis for Daratech, Inc. (Cambridge, MA) is that finite
element analysis (FEA) vendors are making their products more useful and more
intuitive throughout the organization by adding wizards, automating tasks,
enhancing results visualization, and simplifying the mesh-creation process.
Yes, these capabilities improve overall usability, continues Schnitger. They
also generally serve to increase the potential user base by moving analysis
into design, as well as add new types of analysis to the analysts
toolkit.
FEA vendors are also focusing on data management. FEA creates volumes
of data that must be maintained for legal, design reuse, and other reasons,
points out Schnitger. While CAD-oriented product data management systems work,
Schnitger explains they generally dont have the hooks into
FEA that facilitate searching and reuse. Another trend, though not a new one,
is that FEA packages are broadening to comprise a number of different analysis
techniques. A couple of years ago, says Schnitger, someone
figured out how much money was spent moving a single design from analysis type
to analysis type. Its an astronomical number.
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Trends in FEA
- Growing demand for software that can solve ever-larger
finite element models
- Increasing realization that engineer productivity requires
more than just fast solvers
- Blurring of the traditional line between stress and motion
simulation
- More interest in leveraging the same model for multiple
analyses
- Emergence of a single master analysis
environment that will manage functional requirements and
link full-system,
subsystem, and component-level analyses
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These trends seem to boil down to two things, explains Todd Evans, spokesperson
for MSC.Software. Suppliers and OEMs want enterprise-level, sophisticated
products for their high-end analysts. These are the guys who perform FEA every
minute of every day. They also want their designers to have access to some of
the same tools in a CAD-embedded format. In the latter case, FEA cant
speak Ph.D. engineering; it has to speak CAD. It has to be easy-to-use, and
have sophistication and interoperability built into it.
Here is how some FEA software vendors are responding to these trends.
Abaqus, Inc. (Pawtucket, RI)
Abaqus has three major products lines: Abaqus/Standard, Abaqus/Explicit, and
Abaqus/CAE. The first two are solvers. Abaqus/Standard is a general-purpose
FEA program; Abaqus/Explicit tackles non-linear, transient dynamics problems
(such as crash testing). Abaqus/CAE is a visualization product used to build
Abaqus models, launch and monitor analyses, and evaluate results.
Abaqus introduced a fourth product in January, Abaqus/Foundation, for mid-range
analyses. Abaqus/Foundation is a subset of Abaqus/Standard. For instance, Abaqus/Foundation
provides linear static and dynamic analysis, but it does not provide all of
the advanced non-linear features that the standard product has. However Abaqus/Foundation
is also 20% to 30% less expensive than Abaqus/Standard.
Last September, Abaqus introduced version 6.3 of its product suite. Natch,
it comes with new features. For example, in older products, youd have
to define all of the small surfaces that might hit other small surfaces, like
a persons head hitting the dashboard. Abaqus/Explicit now has an impact
simulation capability called General Contact that simplifies things
as it assumes anything might hit everything; it finds contacts that
you might not have anticipated, thereby letting you quickly define models.
In addition to new functionality, Abaqus has back filled Abaqus/Standard
v6.3; that is, the company has fleshed out the product with additional features,
particularly intermediate-level analyses, such as vibration analysis
and, for the static analysis of a free body, Inertia Relief. Also v6.3 offers
direct import of native geometry from a number of CAD systems. Moreover, users
can eliminate insignificant details in complex CAD geometry with new virtual
topology tools that combine model faces into virtual faces and edges into virtual
edges automatically or semi-automatically.
Ansys, Inc. (Canonsburg, PA)
Ansys has also been expanding its simulation footprint and enhancing its analysis
environment. The Ansys 7.0 release introduces new technology based on CADOE
Software. This technology gives userswith one analysisall the results
corresponding to the variations of their design parameters.
Also included in the 7.0 release is the Ansys Workbench Environment. Workbench
updates a number of Ansys capabilities, including user interface, CAD integration,
automatic meshing, access to model parameters, and access to advanced Ansys
functionalityall within one environment. For instance, Workbench users
can access additional modules, such as AGP, DesignXplorer, and Fatigue.
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Heres Virtual.Lab Motion predicting fatigue. Going clockwise from the upper
left window, the designer firstcreated a subassembly of a rear suspension. Then
the designer applied specific road profiles as excitation on the wheels. The subassemblys
modal participation factors for deformation and stresses are displayed as a function
of time. While post-processing the durability results, such as fatigue damage
or hot spots, Virtual.Lab automatically locates major fatigue damage areas. [Photo
courtesy of LMS]
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Additional Ansys functionality is integrated into the Workbench through Ansys
applets. This approach, say company officials, embeds Ansys in an Ansys Workbench
Environment session much like an Excel spreadsheet can be embedded in
a PowerPoint presentation. Clicking on the spreadsheet jumps you into the Excel
environmentswitching back to PowerPoint switches you again back to PowerPoint.
That said, company officials also say that if you are doing nonlinear
contact analysis with linear material propertiesor any type of analysis
that the Ansys Workbench Environment supports nativelyyou will never venture
into the Ansys applet.
LMS North America (Troy, MI)
Some FEA companies are focused on a specific type of analysis, such as finite
element (FE) for mode solutions, thermal analysis, or stress analysis. LMS,
says Doug Fiorani, LMS business manager, turns that around. It focuses on the
functional attributes, on applications. For instance, LMS focuses on noise and
vibration, durability, fatigue prediction, engine dynamics, and ride comfort
versus FE, boundary element, multibody, and parametric component modules. This
approach lets users apply multiple solutions, or solvers, that are independent
of each other to analyze the problem they are trying to solve.
The LMS flagship product is Virtual.Lab, an integrated software system for
virtual prototyping and analyzing acoustics, noise and vibration, durability,
and motion. It consists of a family of modules and submodules. For instance,
within Virtual.Lab Motion are the Engine Solution, Virtual Test Track, and Suspension
submodules. Last November, LMS released an Ansys interface that gives users
an active, associative link between Virtual.Lab and Ansys for all linear structural
analysis. This interface is in addition to the ones LMS has for Abaqus, Catia
Structural Analysis, I-DEAS, and MSC.Nastran. These links enable automatic updates
and eliminate time-consuming, error-prone data transfers.
Another LMS product, Test.Lab, is best suited for noise and vibration testing.
The latest version includes tools for rotating machinery, structural and acoustic
testing, vibration control, reporting, and data sharing. It is capable of parallel
measurement modes, which speeds up measurement and analysis; includes Smart
Sensor (TEDS) support to avoid set-up errors and reduce set-up time; and lets
users make their own workbook templates. A third product, TEC.Manager, is like
a Yahoo for your engineering data, explains Fiorani. It is a web
server that works with an Oracle database to index engineering data. TEC.Manager
is LMS-centric; it supports data file formats that LMS typically uses in its
applications. Third-party formats are accessible through an XML driver.
MSC.Software Corp. (Santa Ana, CA)
In February, MSC released MSC.Patran 2003, which lets engineers create FE models
from their CAD parts. This lets engineers not only create and visualize the
parts theyre designing, it lets them test multiple product designs as
well. MSC.Patran 2003 has a new surface mesher that lets users create a new
mesh from an existing mesh, with options to retain relevant features from the
original model and selectively refine areas of a mesh. The new version also
has Parasolid-based functionality that lets users edit, delete, or show features
such as holes, blends, and chamfers.
Last summer, MSC expanded its MSC.visualNastran V5i line to five products.
These five are based upon the Dassault Systemes V5 Component Application Architecture
(CAA), thus giving Catia V5 users seamless access to MSC analysis and simulation
tools. The five products are: MSC.Nastran Generative, which provides direct
access to basic MSC.Nastran simulation capabilities; MSC.Nastran Gateway, which
gives CATIA users access to basic MSC.Nastran simulation capabilities in a fully
generative way; MSC.Generative Thermal for simulating complex thermal operating
environments; MSC.Dynamic Designer for CAA V5, which enables dynamic motion
simulation to be performed on Catia v5 assemblies; and the STEP AP209 Gateway
for transferring FE information from Catia v5.
In January, MSC added two more. MSC.Generative Nonlinear lets Catia users simulate
large deformations and the complex effects of material plasticity (again, crash
testing). MSC.Marc Gateway lets Catia users import and export MSC.Marc-native
files, as well as visualize the results from MSC.Marcwithout leaving Catia
v5.
What if you dont use Catia? Back in December, MSC released a new version
of MSC.visualNastran 4D, its standalone visual analysis tool. This version supports
virtually every CAD system; it lets users define a spherical joint on a curved
slot; it includes clipping planes, which lets users view stress/strain
information from sectional views of an assembly; and it can save pictures of
an active modeling window in JPEG, BITMAP, or GIF.
Later this year, MSC will be offering stochastics, that is Monte Carlo simulation,
for high-end analysis. Now youre talking hard-core simulation power
and computational sophistication to analyze products, says Evans. Stochastics
alone is not an application; Evans, in fact, calls it middleware. Stochastic
functions let users run, say, a thousand random simulations of a crash test.
The results cloud from these simulations helps in optimizing product designs.
Driving Change
Design teams, urges Daratechs Schnitger, need to examine their product
design process to determine how best to employ each type of analysis.
And how best to employ people. A well-trained designer, explains Schnitger,
could perform basic analysis on design alternatives, leaving analysts free to
perform a more detailed analysis of the final design. Moreover, she continues,
analysts need to weigh the trade-offs of re-mesh time for different types of
analyses, mesh accuracy, processing time, and other factors against the accuracy
of results. What does she think is possibly the biggest trend related to FEA?
Changing work processes within product design companies to take advantage
of these tools.