Examples
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| − | A thick cylinder under internal pressure using axial symmetry | + | A thick cylinder under internal pressure using axial symmetry as found in <ref>C. Felippa, AFEM.12, p.15, [http://www.colorado.edu/engineering/CAS/courses.d/AFEM.d/AFEM.Ch12.d/AFEM.Ch12.pdf]</ref>. The solid lines denote the original configuration. |
[[Image:thick_cylinder.png|thumb|A thick cylinder under internal pressure.]] | [[Image:thick_cylinder.png|thumb|A thick cylinder under internal pressure.]] | ||
Revision as of 16:30, 29 May 2007
Here you may find (or even upload) examples of using nemesis.
Contents |
A pile under lateral loading
This example studies a pile subjected to a lateral loading.
The example consists of the main file pile[ns].dat followed by geometry files:
A pile raft
A dome-shaped lattice framework
A dome-shaped lattice framework described in the "Handbook of computational solid mechanics" by M.Kleiber<ref>M.Kleiber,"Handbook of computational solid mechanics",1998</ref>. Outer nodes are fixed and a nodal load is applied to node 1.
Timoshenko beam
Cantilever beam example, motivated by <ref>O.C. Zienkiewicz & R.L. Taylor, "The Finite Element Method for Solids and Structural Mechanics", 6th Edition, p307</ref>, demonstrating shear locking effects. Twenty elements are used for different span L to depth h ratios for a rectangular cross-section. The beams used are the Bernulli-Euler, a 2-node full integration (2 points) Timoshenko beam, a 2-node reduced integration (1 point) Timoshenko beam, a 3-node full integration (3 points) Timoshenko beam and a 3-node reduced integration (2 points) Timoshenko beam. The use of exact integration for the second one, leads to a solution which 'locks' as the beam becomes slender, whereas the reduced integration scheme shows no locking for the range plotted. The results are also given in the following table, where the example can be found here.
A thick cylinder
A thick cylinder under internal pressure using axial symmetry as found in <ref>C. Felippa, AFEM.12, p.15, [1]</ref>. The solid lines denote the original configuration.
Examples from transient analyzes
A series of examples including:
- a single uniaxial element under a sinusoidal load in linear analysis,
- in non-linear analysis,
- including Rayleigh damping, or
- a series of uniaxial elements under ground motion uniform excitation, either a sinusoidal one or reading it from a file.
Notes
<references/>