Tekiti
Aerospace
- Jan 8, 2013
- 4
Hello All!
I have the following problem with meshing of a ragged solid. I always prefer meshing with brick elements but sometimes it is impossible to mesh a solid using bricks in the whole volume. I decided to divide this solid into three parts, where two of them can easily be meshed by bricks and the middle part has to be meshed by tetras. See the figure.
To connect these parts I don’t want to use weld contact. I would like mesh the middle part using the same nodes on the interfaces and then merge nodes. I have already tried to mesh yellow parts at border areas using “plot-only” quad elements, copy them to the same location, split them into triangles and then make associativity between these triangles and middle (red) solid. But Femap don’t take these elements into account during tetra meshing of middle part.
So my question is how to coerce Femap to mesh some solid using existing nodes on some face?? I hope, that some appropriate tool exists, because this can be done in Patran or in Abaqus.
Thank you very much,
M.
I have the following problem with meshing of a ragged solid. I always prefer meshing with brick elements but sometimes it is impossible to mesh a solid using bricks in the whole volume. I decided to divide this solid into three parts, where two of them can easily be meshed by bricks and the middle part has to be meshed by tetras. See the figure.
To connect these parts I don’t want to use weld contact. I would like mesh the middle part using the same nodes on the interfaces and then merge nodes. I have already tried to mesh yellow parts at border areas using “plot-only” quad elements, copy them to the same location, split them into triangles and then make associativity between these triangles and middle (red) solid. But Femap don’t take these elements into account during tetra meshing of middle part.
So my question is how to coerce Femap to mesh some solid using existing nodes on some face?? I hope, that some appropriate tool exists, because this can be done in Patran or in Abaqus.
Thank you very much,
M.