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3D Solid Elements in Finite Element Analysis

This document discusses 3D solid elements and axisymmetric solid elements in finite element analysis. It introduces 3D solid elements, including tetrahedral and hexahedral elements, and describes how stresses, strains, displacements, and stiffness matrices are formulated in 3D. It also covers axisymmetric solid elements, how the formulations are similar to plane elements but account for circumferential strain, and how nonaxisymmetric loads can be handled using Fourier series representations of loads and displacements.

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Qamar Uz Zaman
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
273 views10 pages

3D Solid Elements in Finite Element Analysis

This document discusses 3D solid elements and axisymmetric solid elements in finite element analysis. It introduces 3D solid elements, including tetrahedral and hexahedral elements, and describes how stresses, strains, displacements, and stiffness matrices are formulated in 3D. It also covers axisymmetric solid elements, how the formulations are similar to plane elements but account for circumferential strain, and how nonaxisymmetric loads can be handled using Fourier series representations of loads and displacements.

Uploaded by

Qamar Uz Zaman
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

6.

3D Solids and Solids of


Revolution

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

6.1 Introduction
• Problems of beam bending, plane stress,
plates, etc. may be considered as special
cases of 3D solids.
• So why not use 3D solids all the time?
– Harder to prepare
– Harder to check for errors
– Much greater demand on computer resources

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

1
Introduction
• Stress can vary in all three directions
• Nodes are located in 3 space
• Nodes have displacements in 3 directions

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

Stress-strain relations
• Stress-strain relations are now described
by a 6x6 matrix

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

2
Strain-Displacement Relations
• If strains are small:

• These are the most general equations. In deriving


previous elements we made assumptions about some of
these values (e.g. in plane strain we assumed εz=0)
MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

Displacement Interpolation
• Displacements within an element are interpolated
from nodal displacements using u=Nd, as before,
however there are now interpolations in three
directions.

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

3
General Formula for k
• The general, energy-based formula for k is the
same as for previous elements, except that there
are more terms in the integration due to the
bigger matrices.

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

6.2 3D Solid Elements


• The 3D solid elements are analogous to
planar counterparts:
– Constant Strain Tetrahedron Å Const. Strain Triangle
– Linear Strain Tetrahedron Å Linear Strain Triangle
– Trilinear Hexahedron Å Bilinear Quadrilateral
– Quadratic Hexahedron Å Parabolic Quadrilateral

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

4
Constant Strain Tetrahedron
• As with the Constant Strain Triangle, it is
only accurate when strains are almost
constant over the element span.

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

Trilinear Hexahedron
• Is also called the 8 node “brick” element.

• Solving for shape functions:

• Isoparametrically:
MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

5
Distributed Loading
• The work equivalent nodal loads for a
constant distributed pressure p are as
shown.

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

6.3 Axisymmetric Solid Elements


• In axisymmetric problems, the geometry is axisymmetric
and the loads and support are usually also axisymmetric,
but they do not need to be, if certain tricks are employed.
• Meshing is similar to plane problems, however each node
represents a circle and each element represents the
cross section of an annulus.

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

6
Axisymmetric Solid Elements
• Stress-strain relations

• Strain-displacement relations

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

Axisymmetric Solid Elements


• Displacement interpolation

• General formula for k (axisymmetric stress field)

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

7
Axisymmetric Elements
• Except for circumferential strain of εθ=u/r, these
elements are similar to plane elements.
• Three node triangle is similar to constant strain
triangle:

• However, εθ is a function of r and z (it is not


constant strain).

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

Axisymmetric Elements
• Because of εθ, axisymmetric elements will always
counteract radial forces and moments as shown.

• Note that:

• Isoparametrically:
MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

8
Nonaxisymmetric Loads
• We can use Fourier Series to represent
loads as a function of θ!

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

Nonaxisymmetric Loads
• We can also use Fourier Series to
represent the displacements as functions
of θ!

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

9
Nonaxisymmetric Loads
• Each harmonic can be solved
independently.

MEEM4405 Introduction to Finite Element Analysis

10

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