enriquelvarez
Mechanical
- Jan 25, 2007
- 20
Hello,
I've been working on simulating two numerical samples in solid elements. Both samples are in different materials that have the same Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE)in three directions.
In addition, a thin skin of shell elements in aluminium (with a CTE different from the one of the solids) is put on the top and on the bottom of the samples. So samples are a sandwich: shell(CTE1) + solid(CTE2) + shell(CTE1)
When heating the samples, expansion behaviour is not the same for the samples: maximal and minimal displacement in out of plane direction (plane of the shells) is not the same, even without considering border effect. I suppose that this effect is because of the difference of CTE of the solid and the CTE of SHELL elements.
What I can't understand is how shell elements which have defined CTE just in plane can have an effect in displacements out of plane...
Can anyone help me?
Thank's very much
Enrique
I've been working on simulating two numerical samples in solid elements. Both samples are in different materials that have the same Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE)in three directions.
In addition, a thin skin of shell elements in aluminium (with a CTE different from the one of the solids) is put on the top and on the bottom of the samples. So samples are a sandwich: shell(CTE1) + solid(CTE2) + shell(CTE1)
When heating the samples, expansion behaviour is not the same for the samples: maximal and minimal displacement in out of plane direction (plane of the shells) is not the same, even without considering border effect. I suppose that this effect is because of the difference of CTE of the solid and the CTE of SHELL elements.
What I can't understand is how shell elements which have defined CTE just in plane can have an effect in displacements out of plane...
Can anyone help me?
Thank's very much
Enrique