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INTRODUCTION One of the methods used in the industry to reduce the run time of an explicit FEM analysis is a technique called “Mass scaling”. The run time of a FE simulation is mainly a function of the model size (the number of degrees of freedom) and the size of the solution step and the bigger the…
Leslie Enos
updated on 26 Jan 2022
INTRODUCTION
One of the methods used in the industry to reduce the run time of an explicit FEM analysis is a technique called “Mass scaling”.
The run time of a FE simulation is mainly a function of the model size (the number of degrees of freedom) and the size of the solution step and the bigger the time step, faster the simulation.(not talking about the accuracy here).
I just want to emphasize that the time step size has a significant impact on the run time. As the size of the model is mostly not under our control, we have to play with “Time step” to reduce the runtime.
In other words, we have to increase the time step size. How we do this is effectively Mass Scaling.
As per the CFL (Courant-Friedrichs-Levy) condition, the stable time step for explicit analysis is
Here emin is the size of the smallest mesh element.
c is the speed of the stress wave
The scaling factor is used for providing numerical stability.
The smallest element in the mesh has the biggest impact on the run time.
Let’s see what ‘c’ is made of.
If we increase the density of the smallest element (add mass actually!), the time step size increases which is what we want.
And you have learnt the technique of mass scaling in a very simple rhetoric.
In other words, some amount of mass is added locally near the smallest elements in the mesh, which increases the density, thereby increasing the stable time step size henceforth reducing the solution run time.
PROCEDURE
IMPLICIT ANALYSIS
An implicit analysis is done to consider the differences in both approaches.
The folllowing control cards are created in Ls-Prepost below after the file is imported into the deck.
RESULTS
CONCLUSION
The results taken for the experiment describes exactly the effects of mass scaling with TSSFAC ,DT2MS etc.
From the above plotted histogram, it can clearly be seen that ,increasing of Dt2ms caused an increse in simulation time,% mass change and dt timestep.All this was seen with a constant TSSFACC of 0.9. When the TSSFACC was reduced , the was a drop in the dt timestep as the value has been scaled down compared to the 0.9 while keeping all other variables constant compared with the prior one. Mass of 4 percent was significantly added to the specimen when the Dt2ms was increased.
The explicit analysis was very short taking less than a minute to complete and the results were very good.Mass scaling isnt needed in implicit.
NB : files were to large to be attached so link for access is below
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Wdkwq3spqoia0KfsbkwzyvSj2YFiXTEm?usp=sharing
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INTRODUCTION One of the methods used in the industry to reduce the run time of an explicit FEM analysis is a technique called “Mass scaling”. The run time of a FE simulation is mainly a function of the model size (the number of degrees of freedom) and the size of the solution step and the bigger the…
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