5 Things To Check If Your Simulation Results Are Wrong
“Garbage in, gospel out.” A slightly different take on the old adage, this is many people’s perspective on analysis results. But us engineers know better, right? Simulation results are generally only as good as the inputs to the problem. Or at least, you need to understand the limits of your engineering assumptions, and guide your interpretation of results accordingly. There are however many times you’re certain your results are wrong, and yet you can’t figure out why.
Step One: Do Not Blame The Software
It’s tempting to blame the software, but we find in tech support that less than 1% of so-called “wrong” results actually turn out to be a glitch in the system. Instead, generally the cause is PEBKAC: Problem Exists Between Keyboard And Chair. Here are some common missteps that you can double-check before embarrassing yourself in front of a fellow engineer.
Are You Using the Right Units?
SOLIDWORKS Simulation is great at letting you mix and match units within each dialog box as you set up the problem and examine the results. No more worrying about slugs-per-cubic-inch! However we still see a surprising occurrence of users missing the subtle indication of MPa when they’re expecting to see psi. Verify your units:
- Double-click on the color scale.
- Choose the Definition tab.
- Select desired units.
Also pay attention to the units used within each object on the study tree. Sure you can combine newtons with inches, watts with Fahrenheit, BTU’s with millimeters, etc. – but be careful! If you change the unit type after you’ve typed in a number, SOLIDWORKS does the math to convert the value to the new units. For example, 5 newtons becomes 1.142 pounds, and NOT 5 pounds! After changing from SI to English, type the number again!
Are You Displaying the Desired Result Type?
But It Doesn’t Match My Hand Calculations!
Here is a partial list of things the solver does correctly, but your hand calculations might not:
- buoyancy effects (hot air rises)
- turbulence
- transient flow (unstable and/or non-steady-state)
- radiation
- friction
- non-idealized geometry
But It Doesn’t Match My Test Results!
Double-Check Your Setup
- Pay attention that Force or Power applied to multiple faces is “Per item” or “Total”.
- Make sure you’re using a High Quality Mesh for final results.
- Initial Temperature needs to be defined for each body for Transient Thermal studies.
- By default all touching faces are Bonded. Is that what you intended?
- Automatically finding Contact Pairs can create a lot of confusion. Verify every one.
- Loads and fixtures should be applied to faces, not edges or vertices (typically).
- A negative Pressure acts in the opposite direction of the arrow symbols.
- For thermal stress, the Zero Strain Temperature is defined in the Study Properties.
- Did you specify the fluid temperature in your Convection boundary conditions?
- In a Thermal study, did you miss selecting and loading any exterior faces?
Unbelievable Results
Sometimes, the results aren’t wrong at all, they’re just not what you wanted to hear. Engineers are much more critical of simulation results that indicate a design flaw than they are of results that show good news. Hopefully, you’re doing analysis using SOLIDWORKS Simulation early and often in your design cycle, so you can identify concerns while they are still cheap and easy to fix! If not, then blame Al Gore.CAPINC
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