Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 1 An Analyst’s View: STEP-Enabled CAD-CAE Integration Stephen Gordon NASA’s STEP for Aerospace Workshop JPL, Pasadena, CA January 17,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 1 An Analyst’s View: STEP-Enabled CAD-CAE Integration Stephen Gordon NASA’s STEP for Aerospace Workshop JPL, Pasadena, CA January 17,"— Presentation transcript:

1 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 1 An Analyst’s View: STEP-Enabled CAD-CAE Integration Stephen Gordon NASA’s STEP for Aerospace Workshop JPL, Pasadena, CA January 17, 2001

2 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 2 CAD-CAE Integration Domains Purpose, Scope, and Scale of Analysis CAD-Centric vs. CAE-Centric Processes Categories of Integration (What is truly ‘Seamless’?) De-Featuring Geometry (Content, Amount of Detail) Geometry ‘Gender Changing’ Needs and Tools “Simulation-Specific Geometry” vs. CAD Geometry Collaboration (Inter- and Intra-Company) ISO STEP 10303 is not just about Data Exchange AP209 is an Enabler for CAD-CAE Integration AP209 = CAD + CAE + FEM + FEA + PDM (Mnemonic) Backup Slides Outline of Topics

3 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 3 CAE Functionality Computer-Aided Engineering (CAE) is made up of many varied and diverse functions, depending upon one’s organization and it’s structure. My focus will be on the exchange and sharing of design and engineering data (largely geometry and material information) for use in computational analysis tools, specifically finite element method codes. My purpose today is to define where I see, as an analyst, the potential and growing use for ISO STEP AP209. There is no attempt to slight many other important (non- analytical) engineering functions in the CAD-CAE domain related to the overall design, approval, and life-cycle of the products we create.

4 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 4 The key to understanding CAD-CAE Integration, is related to the scale, scope and purpose of the required engineering analysis - e.g. Finite Element Analysis (FEA). It is not simply related to the existence of captured CAD geometry, a perception unwittingly left during product model ‘walk-throughs’. The closer the scale, scope and purpose of an engineering analysis is to the type and detail of the existing CAD product model geometry, the greater the likelihood that a closely-coupled, automated, or even seamless integrated CAD-CAE process can be implemented. CAD and CAE Integration

5 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 5 Scope, Purpose, and Scale Small-scale, single part optimization “Widgets & Gadgets” Large-scale simulation, e.g. vehicle crash- worthiness These may both employ the same software, but with significantly different models!

6 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 6 Large-Scale Simulation, Full Vehicle Models Part of the CAE Domain Such analyses and simulations likely include multi-physics and media- structure interaction

7 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 7 When the scale, scope and purpose of an engineering analysis are not consistent with the type and detail of the existing CAD product model geometry, a computer-assisted “man-in-the- loop” or semi-automated process may be more feasible and appropriate than a fully-automated process. (Still a place for engineering judgement.) We have found that the time and cost to change, re-work, and de-feature CAD geometry can sometimes be greater than that for creating analysis models from readily-generated “idealized” geometry. (Not a popular view in today’s world!) The more abstract, idealized geometry used for analysis is also referred to as “Simulation-Specific” or “FEA-Specific Geometry”. CAD and CAE Integration

8 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 8 Captured CAD Geometry Derived Idealized Geometry Engr. Anal. Model (FEM) Simplify Idealize De-Feature Pave Mesh Discretize Analysis Model Creation (e.g. FEA) Change Type or “Gender” Geometry is not always the same! A mechanical engineer, a structural engineer, and a piping engineer may each require different forms of geometry capture.

9 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 9 Geometry Representation Same Object... Multiple/Different Forms of Geometry Capture 1D Line (Curve) 3D Solid (Volume) 2D Surface (Shell)

10 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 10 Exploded View - Same Geometry, Different Data Capture 1D Line (Curve) 3D Solid (Volume) 2D Surface (Shell) “Gender Changing”

11 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 11 The value of engineering analysis and optimization early (‘up front’) in the design process is now readily accepted and is generally unassailable. Unfortunately, there is often the perception (sometimes from MCAD vendor hype) that engineering analysis is a totally seamless process within CAD. This view can be a disservice to many sectors of business, where solid product models have become the CAD approach of choice, but the wrong geometry for analysis. Fortunately, articles in the literature have recently begun to reflect some of these different views on delivering analysis. Integrated CAD-CAE Process

12 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 12 Recent Articles Show Enlightened Views “Three-Dimensional CAD Design and Analyzing with Shell Elements - A Soluble Contradiction?”, by M. W. Zehn, H. M. Baumgarten, & P. Wehner, NAFEMS 7th Int’l. Conf., Newport, RI, April 1999 “Don’t Change the Model Till the Simulation Finishes”, by Paul Kurowski, Machine Design, August 19, 1999 “Rookie Mistakes - Over Reliance on CAD Geometry”, by Vince Adams, NAFEMS Benchmark, October 1999 “Common Misconceptions About FEA”, by Vince Adams, ANSYS Solutions, Fall 2000 “Eight Tips for Improving Integration Between CAD and CFD”, by Scott Gilmore, Desktop Engineering, May 2000

13 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 13 “Don’t Change the Model Till the Simulation Finishes” by Paul Kurowski Machine Design August 19, 1999 When analysis geometry is not the same as design geometry! “Simulation-specific geometry”or “FEA-specific geometry”

14 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 14 CAD-CAE Integration Whether CAD-CAE applications can be closely-integrated and automated depends upon: The scale, scope, and purpose of the CAE analysis. The nature and type (order, or “gender”) of the captured CAD geometry. The amount of detail required for the CAE application. Today’s bottleneck in CAD-CAE integration is not automated mesh (grid) generation, it lies with efficient creation of appropriate simulation-specific geometry.

15 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 15 In general, the most automated CAD-to-CAE processes are for MCAE “same gender” geometry classes, eg. widgets and gadgets, or 3D volumes filled with 3D elasticity tet or hex solid elements; or piping analysis employing 1D geometry. In the structures discipline, our ship product lines most often involve large scale, simplified geometry and analysis models, e.g. large assemblages of stiffened 2D plate/shell surfaces and framework structures. However, enterprise CAD product model geometry capture is fundamentally 3D solid modeling supplemented with 1D “structures” entities. Thin-walled structure is more accurately and efficiently analyzed as plates and shells. The First “Problem” - Geometry Type

16 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 16 1D Lines, Curves 2D Surfaces 2D ‘Cut” Surfaces (or Sections) 3D Volumes Beams, Trusses Axisymmetric Shells Stiffened Plates & Shells Plates & Shells Plane Stress / Strain Elasticity Axisymmetric Solids (“Quasi-3D”) 3D Solid Elasticity Creating Engineering Analysis Models Geometry TypeAnalysis Model Type Same “Gender” Geometry

17 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 17 Creating Engineering Analysis Models Idealized Geometry Analysis Model Type (Eg. FEM) 1D Lines, Curves 2D Surfaces 2D ‘Cut” Surfaces (or Sections) 3D Volumes Beams, Trusses Axisymmetric Shells Stiffened Plates & Shells Plates & Shells Plane Stress/ Strain Elasticity Axisymmetric Solids (“Quasi-3D”) 3D Solid Elasticity Captured CAD Geometry CAD Structures (1D) CAD Solids (3D) CAD-Centric Approaches CAD Surfaces (2D) Can be ‘Seamless’ ‘Gender-Changing’ Required

18 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 18 Creating Engineering Analysis Models Idealized Geometry Analysis Model Type (Eg. FEM) 1D Lines, Curves 2D Surfaces 2D ‘Cut” Surfaces (or Sections) 3D Volumes Beams, Trusses Axisymmetric Shells Stiffened Plates & Shells Plates & Shells Plane Stress/ Strain Elasticity Axisymmetric Solids (“Quasi-3D”) 3D Solid Elasticity Captured CAD Geometry 3D Solid Product Model CAD-Centric Process with a 3D Solid Product Model Requires “Gender Changing”

19 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 19 The Second “Problem” - Model Content and Amount of Detail In general, the captured CAD geometry contains a great deal of detail, necessary for creating drawings and for manufacturing support, but too much detail for most idealized FEA models. Therefore, the idealization portion of FEA requires simplifying the geometry, removing unwanted details which are not commensurate with the scale of the idealized FEA model. Examples include removing small holes, adding or removing fillets, even eliminating whole portions which may be idealized as a rigid mass, or may not be in the analysis at all! This process of simplification is sometimes referred to as “suppressing the details” or “de-featuring” the geometry. For welded structure adding features (weld fillets) to the CAD product model may be required for detailed stress analysis.

20 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 20 Welded Thin-Walled Structure with a 3D Solid Product Model Portion of foundation for resilient mounts and shock snubbers Weld material is annotated (e.g.weld symbols), but not explicitly captured as fillets in the product model (as it would be for a machined part) JXXX Joint Surface Index Typical de-featuring might include eliminating the small holes but keeping the larger ones. Whereas, a featuring change could be adding weld fillets to avoid stress concentrations or singularities at sharp corners.

21 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 21 Categories of CAD-CAE Integration Category I - The CAD Geometry and the Simulation-Specific Geometry are the same (identical). This is the truly “seamless” case; there is no change in detail, no de-featuring, and no geometry gender changing required. Analysts and designers use the same (or duplicate copies of the same) geometry. Category II - Existing (available) CAD geometry has the wrong content; it is too detailed and/or of the wrong type to support the scale, scope, and purpose of the required or most appropriate type of analysis. Changes are required to add features or remove unnecessary detail from, and/or modify the gender of, the CAD geometry to create Simulation-Specific Geometry amenable to analysis. Automated and semi-automated procedures are required. Category III - Engineering analyses are performed first to define and refine a design concept using idealized geometry prior to establishment of the enterprise (CAD) product model. Simulation-Specific Geometry employed for analysis models will require modification and the addition of details and features to support drawings and manufacturing. Automated and semi- automated procedures are desirable. CAD-Centric Process CAE-Centric Process

22 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 22 CAD Geometry = Simulation- Specific Geometry Engr. Anal. Model (FEM) Pave Mesh Discretize Captured CAD Geometry Simulation- Specific Geometry Engr. Anal. Model (FEM) Simplify Idealize De-Feature Pave Mesh Discretize Change Type or “Gender” Start CAD-Centric Approaches Category I Category II

23 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 23 A CAE-Centric Approach Category III Create CAD Geometry Simulation- Specific Geometry Engr. Anal. Model (FEM) Add Details & Features Pave Mesh Discretize Modify Type or “Gender” Start More mature or optimized concept prior to CAD geometry capture; designers add detail later for drawing creation, design disclosure, and manufacturing

24 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 24 Category I Solids Examples Mechanical parts and components

25 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 25 TET MeshingHEX Paving Automated model building options are readily available in almost all CAD and CAE tools 3D Solids & 3D Elasticity Analysis

26 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 26 Categories II & III Thin-Walled Structures (Where the product model is solids)

27 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 27 EB Example - Automated Mid-Surfacing CAD-Centric Category II (Solids-to-Shells) Welded Plate Tank Structure - Multiple Brep Manifold Solids

28 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 28 Solids Mid-Surfaces Trimmed and Adjusted Mid-Surfaces 1 2 Automated Mid-Surfacing Category II (Solids-to-Shells)

29 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 29 COTS capabilities now exist for automatic creation of mid-surface geometry and shell FEA mesh. Category II 1. Thin-walled solid part 2. Mid-surface geometry 3. Meshed FEA shell model

30 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 30 Section of Stiffened Deck Plate “DECK_ASSY” Assembly with deck plate and replicated (dittoed) tee stiffeners (Example used in Nov. ‘98 PDES demo using PATRAN and COMMANDS)

31 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 31 Automatically created mid-surface geometry Solid geometry

32 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 32 FEA Idealization #1 Explicitly Modeled Stiffeners (8-noded shell elements shown) FEA Idealization #2 Eccentric Beam Stiffeners (4-noded shell elements with 2-noded eccentric beam elements)

33 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 33 Collaboration You’ve heard a lot at this workshop about inter-company collaboration, multi-tiered supply chains, even world-wide collaboration. Large companies, such as those many of us work for, often have separate groups and departments which requires intra- company cooperation and collaboration. Integration with standards (such as ISO STEP) is a logical way to build an intra-company architecture of sharing between separate design and analysis organizations. Such an in-house, multi-department business process built on standards is easily transitioned into an external collaborative teaming endeavor, when and if that would be prudent.

34 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 34 The ISO STEP 10303 Standards are Enablers for Improved Design-Analysis- Construction Processes Today’s business enterprises must have access to enterprise-wide PDM information which integrates design, analysis, construction and life-cycle support. AP209 provides a means to more closely integrate design and analysis, by including nominal (CAD) geometry, various idealized CAE geometries, and associated FEM analysis models and results, along with PDM and separate version control. Mnemonic: AP209 = CAD + CAE + FEM + FEA + PDM

35 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 35 AP209 = CAD + CAE + FEM + FEA + PDM What is ISO STEP 10303 AP209? Nominal CAD Geometry Idealized CAE “Simulation-Specific” Geometry Finite Element Models Finite Element Analysis Controls & Results Product Data Management Info Mnemonic (Engineers like equations!) One can use AP209 with any one or more of these pieces, but the real power lies with the assemblage of all these parts.

36 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 36 STEP AP209 Repository File Archived Design/Analysis AP209 Snapshots Design Analysis STEP AP209 File FEA Results FEA Controls FE Models Idealized Geometry Nominal Geometry Design Model - PDM Analysis STEP AP209 File FEA Results FEA Controls FE Models Idealized Geometry Nominal Geometry Design Model - PDM Design The ISO STEP 10303 Standards are not just about data exchange! AP209 captures and integrates design, analysis, and CM/PDM information.

37 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 37 Part Part Version Design Discipline Product Definition Nominal Design Shape Idealized Analysis Shape Finite Element Analysis Shape Analysis Analysis Version Analysis Design Version Relationship Analysis Discipline Product Definition Assembly Allow Analysis to Revise Independently of Design Detailed AP209 PDM Concepts

38 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 38 Recommended Practices for AP209 ME007.01.00 June 25, 1999 Nominal CAD Geometry Idealized CAE Geometry FEA Model

39 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 39 COTS Vendor Report Card Category I A Mature, MCAD for solids good Category IIB-,C+Improving, recent mid-surfacing attention Category IIID,FVery little for CAE-centric ‘leading design’, need shell ‘thickening’ tools, or ‘solids-on-demand’ Overall: Still too CAD-Centric Continued role for traditional FEA pre- and post-processors AP209 is ready to support / enable more CAD-CAE integration AP209 is more appropriate for CAE than AP203 Need more vendor support for AP209 CAD-CAE Integration Status

40 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 40 Back-up Slides PDES & NAFEMS Activities EB’s Prototype AP209

41 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 41 Working with larger-scale test cases for AP209 coverage PATRAN COMMANDS 3847 Nodes 6743 Elements

42 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 42 NAFEMS Benchmark LE10 Thick Plate Pressure NAFEMS Benchmark LE5 Z-Section Cantilever Joint PDES & NAFEMS Activity Recasting NAFEMS FEA Benchmarks into AP209 Format NAFEMS Benchmark LE1 2D Plane Stress

43 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 43 AP209 Translator AP209 Part21 File Electric Boat’s AP209 Translator is Interfaced with the COMMANDS FEA System Binary Ascii

44 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 44 AP209 Translator AP209 Part21 File Ascii COMMANDS Data Base (CDB) Binary EB’s currently implemented prototype AP209 Translator is closely interfaced with EB’s COMMANDS Data Base using binary reads and writes. It was kept separate to enable appending multiple analysis models and results onto a single repository (Part21 file), or selecting and extracting one model with results. Other features (next two slides) were implemented to aid developers as we learned about STEP and Express representation.

45 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 45

46 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 46

47 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 47 Initial Checkout of AP209 Import to COMMANDS

48 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 48 Initial Checkout of AP209 Import to COMMANDS

49 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 49 EB’s AP209 Prototype Geometry - Nominal & Idealized FEA Model & Results

50 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 50 EB Chart 1 EB Chart 2 Common Intersection Example = HEX20 Case - Dynamic Version of the MacNeal-Harder Twisted Beam

51 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 51 EB Chart 1

52 SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 52 EB Chart 2


Download ppt "SFG-GD/EB-1/17/01- 1 An Analyst’s View: STEP-Enabled CAD-CAE Integration Stephen Gordon NASA’s STEP for Aerospace Workshop JPL, Pasadena, CA January 17,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google