The document discusses 10 myths of computational fluid dynamics (CFD). It summarizes the original 5 myths from a previous paper, then introduces 4 new myths and discusses them further. The original myths were that CFD is too difficult, takes too long, is too expensive, cannot use CAD models directly, and that most products do not need CFD analysis. The document argues that advances have debunked these myths and made CFD more accessible. The 4 new myths discussed are that usability is not important, accuracy must be sacrificed for speed, experts are needed for accurate results, and production CAD is too complex for analysis. The document argues these new myths are also false given technological advances.
Bentley is a global leader in infrastructure engineering software. The document discusses Bentley's integrated building solution for structural modeling, analysis, design, documentation, and BIM. It highlights Bentley's leadership in various structural engineering domains and the top design firms that use Bentley software. The agenda outlines a demonstration of a concrete building workflow using RAM Structural System, RAM Concept, and Structural Modeler, followed by overviews of RAM Elements, RAM Connection, and updates to STAAD.Pro. The document argues that Bentley's solution can simplify workflows by creating a single model for structural design that automatically generates engineering drawings and satisfies BIM requirements.
The Use of Agile Methods by the EntrepreneurIsrael Gat
The document discusses the use of agile methods by entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. It argues that the traditional techno-economic paradigm of disruption followed by stabilization no longer applies due to exponential technological change. Agile principles allow for continuous innovation through experimentation and quick response to changes in the market. The document also examines challenges with software contracts and how agile principles could help address those challenges to foster more collaboration between customers and vendors.
Humans have a proclivity for fuzzy thinking and logical inconsistencyGlen Alleman
Fuzzy thinking and logical inconsistency is not the same as differences of opinion, or even differences in fact. The level of fuzziness and logical inconsistency usually follows the level of maturity of the speaker.
This document discusses the concept of technical debt, which refers to code or practices that will hinder future progress. It defines different types of technical debt like prudent, reckless, deliberate, and inadvertent debt. It recommends discovering technical debt using tools like PHPUnderControl or Sonar, estimating the effort to pay it off, breaking it down into tasks, and tracking repayment through bug trackers and task boards. Paying off technical debt focuses on high interest items first and dedicating time for repayments. Preventing future debt involves breaking habits, gaining team commitment to quality code, and anticipating future needs.
Nads & presagis teaming to innovate in distributed simulation xxSimware
NADS and Presagis have agreed to team up to promote modeling & simulation (M&S) solutions based on both companies' commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) software. On November 8th, representatives of the two parties signed a Marketing Agreement at NADS Headquarters to conclude the deal.
The agreement includes collaboration for marketing of COTS-based solutions for Live-Virtual-Constructive (LVC) interoperability. These solutions will be based on Presagis product lines and SIMWARE, the flagship product from NADS.
Know about the agreement between NADS and PRESAGIS and how this companies complement in tools and technologies.
You can see also the webinar made on april 17th about this presentation
http://youtu.be/WPAJ1_UfP9E
This document discusses software engineering and the agile model. It provides an overview of key aspects of each. The agile model was invented in 1999 and involves a step-by-step software development process with user consultation. It is based on values and principles of software engineering. The agile adoption process at TCS involves assessing organizational maturity, balancing agile methodology needs, communicating expectations and skills, digitizing work, and continuously evolving processes. TCS uses an agile model that involves proposing solutions to customer problems, verifying solutions with customers, and delivering the final product or service.
SVA discusses the opportunities and challenges they have encountered during their journey with customers, using mainframe offloading projects as an example.
Bentley is a global leader in infrastructure engineering software. The document discusses Bentley's integrated building solution for structural modeling, analysis, design, documentation, and BIM. It highlights Bentley's leadership in various structural engineering domains and the top design firms that use Bentley software. The agenda outlines a demonstration of a concrete building workflow using RAM Structural System, RAM Concept, and Structural Modeler, followed by overviews of RAM Elements, RAM Connection, and updates to STAAD.Pro. The document argues that Bentley's solution can simplify workflows by creating a single model for structural design that automatically generates engineering drawings and satisfies BIM requirements.
The Use of Agile Methods by the EntrepreneurIsrael Gat
The document discusses the use of agile methods by entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. It argues that the traditional techno-economic paradigm of disruption followed by stabilization no longer applies due to exponential technological change. Agile principles allow for continuous innovation through experimentation and quick response to changes in the market. The document also examines challenges with software contracts and how agile principles could help address those challenges to foster more collaboration between customers and vendors.
Humans have a proclivity for fuzzy thinking and logical inconsistencyGlen Alleman
Fuzzy thinking and logical inconsistency is not the same as differences of opinion, or even differences in fact. The level of fuzziness and logical inconsistency usually follows the level of maturity of the speaker.
This document discusses the concept of technical debt, which refers to code or practices that will hinder future progress. It defines different types of technical debt like prudent, reckless, deliberate, and inadvertent debt. It recommends discovering technical debt using tools like PHPUnderControl or Sonar, estimating the effort to pay it off, breaking it down into tasks, and tracking repayment through bug trackers and task boards. Paying off technical debt focuses on high interest items first and dedicating time for repayments. Preventing future debt involves breaking habits, gaining team commitment to quality code, and anticipating future needs.
Nads & presagis teaming to innovate in distributed simulation xxSimware
NADS and Presagis have agreed to team up to promote modeling & simulation (M&S) solutions based on both companies' commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) software. On November 8th, representatives of the two parties signed a Marketing Agreement at NADS Headquarters to conclude the deal.
The agreement includes collaboration for marketing of COTS-based solutions for Live-Virtual-Constructive (LVC) interoperability. These solutions will be based on Presagis product lines and SIMWARE, the flagship product from NADS.
Know about the agreement between NADS and PRESAGIS and how this companies complement in tools and technologies.
You can see also the webinar made on april 17th about this presentation
http://youtu.be/WPAJ1_UfP9E
This document discusses software engineering and the agile model. It provides an overview of key aspects of each. The agile model was invented in 1999 and involves a step-by-step software development process with user consultation. It is based on values and principles of software engineering. The agile adoption process at TCS involves assessing organizational maturity, balancing agile methodology needs, communicating expectations and skills, digitizing work, and continuously evolving processes. TCS uses an agile model that involves proposing solutions to customer problems, verifying solutions with customers, and delivering the final product or service.
SVA discusses the opportunities and challenges they have encountered during their journey with customers, using mainframe offloading projects as an example.
Secure, Strengthen, Automate, and Scale Modern Workloads with Red Hat & NGINXNGINX, Inc.
Learn how to support your application delivery – no matter where you are on the journey from monolithic apps to microservices.
Join this webinar to learn:
- About important considerations around digital innovation in FSI
- How to leverage automation and Ansible to deliver apps faster
- About keys to delivering modern apps securely and reliably anywhere
- How OpenShift takes the complexity out of containers
https://www.nginx.com/resources/webinars/secure-strengthen-automate-scale-modern-workloads-with-red-hat-nginx/
This newsletter provides updates on the growth and activities of the LinkedIn CFD professional group. The group has grown significantly in the past month to 75 members from diverse backgrounds and locations. A survey on common CFD pain points found that software expenses, mesh generation, and geometry cleanup are the top issues. The newsletter also provides a case study of AGCO's use of Exa's CFD software to optimize engine installation designs, reducing the number of physical prototypes. Finally, it announces the upcoming COMSOL conference and invites members to contribute news, events, and opinions to the newsletter.
Siemens SW Multidisciplinary simulation in the chemical and process industry.pdfEvgenyKulish1
The document discusses how computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation is becoming more widely used in the chemical and process industries. It describes a new workflow tool within Siemens' Simcenter STAR-CCM+ software that makes mixing vessel simulation more accessible to engineers. The mixing vessel workflow allows users to easily set up, run, and analyze mixing simulations. It handles geometry creation, meshing, solver setup and includes automated post-processing and parameterized designs to enable design space exploration. This new tool is lowering barriers to using CFD for engineers seeking to solve mixing problems and optimize chemical processes.
The document discusses the complexity of modern product development from designing to manufacturing. It describes the many software tools and processes involved in designing a simple product like a phone, including CAD, PDM, ERP systems. Manufacturing a product involves planning production using CAM and managing the supply chain. While technology helps, human judgment is still needed to integrate all parts of the process. Simplifying processes where possible and thinking through every step can help manage complexity.
This slide contains a brief presentation of how Organizations can leverage Cloud to virtualize functional/performance testing and cost benefit from investing in hardware.
Rio Info 2010 - Seminário de Tecnologia - Integracao de Servicos - Cesar Taur...Rio Info
Cezar Taurion discusses how cloud computing is transforming the IT industry. Cloud computing leverages virtualization, standardization, and automation to reduce costs while increasing capabilities. It allows resources to be provisioned in minutes and paid through metering/billing models. While infrastructure as a service is common, platforms and software as a service provide additional benefits. Both opportunities and challenges exist for companies and CIOs in adopting cloud computing strategies.
1. The document discusses 5 key topics about disaster recovery planning: mixed platforms in data centers, virtualization, cloud computing, cost savings through virtualization, and the importance of testing disaster recovery plans.
2. Virtualization can simplify disaster recovery planning by allowing a single virtual recovery platform to protect all workloads regardless of physical or virtual servers and operating systems.
3. Cloud computing is well-suited for disaster recovery needs due to its on-demand, elastic resource model that handles unexpected resource demands.
This document provides an overview of cloud computing, including its benefits, risks, and considerations for implementation. It discusses how cloud computing can reduce costs while accelerating innovation by providing on-demand access to resources and applications. However, it also notes security and compliance risks that must be addressed. The document provides guidance on evaluating cloud computing options and applications, asking the right questions of providers, and testing solutions before full deployment. The goal is to help organizations strategically decide when and how to adopt cloud computing services.
Cloud computing implications for project management methodologiesLivingstone Advisory
Cloud based technologies are becoming increasingly pervasive across society and are considered by many in business as the next major disruptive innovation. For the first time, organizations can consume, as needed, on-demand, business ready Cloud based enterprise services. This is also known as the Consumerization of IT.
Transitioning to, or deploying new IT systems and services using Cloud technologies present their own unique set of challenges to the IT Departments, Project managers and Pproject management Offices (PMO) alike.
The primary objective of this presentation is to provide a number of key considerations for Project Managers in dealing with projects involving Cloud computing technologies.
This was presented at the 25th International Project Management Institute's Global Conference in Australia on the 11th October 2011 by Rob Livingstone
#IBM Open technology platforms, pre-integrated and pre-tested systems, and optimised configurations that´s
IBM Cloud Infrastructure Alliance especially designed to help you accelerate your journey to the Cloud. Contact me for more details. #ibmcloud
How ci os-and-ctos-can-accelerate-digital-transformations-through-cloud-platf...Ketut Widya
This document discusses how CIOs and CTOs can accelerate digital transformations through cloud platforms. It outlines three key things companies need to do: 1) Focus cloud investments in business domains where cloud can increase revenues and margins; 2) Select a technology and sourcing model aligned with business strategy; and 3) Develop an operating model oriented around the cloud. Traditional cloud implementations that focus on siloed initiatives or "lift and shift" migrations fail to capture cloud's full value. Companies must treat cloud adoption as a business-technology transformation affecting many parts of the organization.
The cloud computing paradigm has achieved widespread adoption in recent years. Its success is due largely to customers’ ability to use services on demand with a pay-as-you go pricing model, which has proved convenient in many respects. Low costs and high flexibility make migrating to the cloud compelling. Despite its obvious advantages, however, many companies hesitate to “move to the cloud,” mainly because of concerns related to service availability, data lock-in, and legal uncertainties. Lock in is particularly problematic. For one thing, even though public cloud availability is generally high, outages still occur
Businesses locked into such a cloud are essentially at a standstill until the cloud is back online. Moreover, public cloud providers generally don’t guarantee particular service level agreements (SLAs) — that is, businesses locked into a cloud have no guarantees that it will continue to provide the required quality of service (QoS). Finally, most public cloud providers’ terms of service let that provider unilaterally change pricing at any time. Hence, a business locked into a cloud has no mid- or long term control over its own IT costs. At the core of all these problems, we can identify a need for businesses to permanently monitor the cloud they’re using and be able to rapidly “change horses” — that is, migrate to a different cloud if they discover problems or if their estimates predict future issues.
This document discusses how cloud computing can provide enterprises with new levels of collaboration, agility, speed, and cost savings. It outlines four key actions every CIO should take to capitalize on cloud computing: 1) build on-premises cloud services, 2) consume off-premises cloud services securely, 3) manage and secure applications and cloud assets across delivery models, and 4) transform legacy infrastructure and applications. The document also summarizes HP's cloud services portfolio and solutions that can help enterprises implement a hybrid cloud delivery model.
This newsletter provides an update on the LinkedIn CFD professional networking group. The group has grown to 227 members from various fields and locations. A discussion group has been created on Google to facilitate communication between members instead of mass emails. The newsletter also announces an upcoming Pointwise user meeting and a career opportunity at a combustion research company. It discusses how CFD is being used more for design through easier-to-use software that integrates with CAD programs. Member input is requested to help guide the group.
One of the most useful design analysis tools now being used in the HVAC industry is something called "CFD". "CFD" stands for "Computational Fluid Dynamics"
The Return on Investment of Computational Fluid DynamicsAnsys
Measuring the ROI of Fast and Reliable Computational
Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is not always straightforward. In this presentation, we are demonstrating the positive ROI of CFD using different point of views.
(1) Advantages and cost-savings of using CFD simulation both early and often during the development.
(2) Avoiding costly downtime or product failures.
(3) The ROI of CFD simulation to optimize product performance.
(4) The cost of choosing the wrong simulation tool.
(5) Some tips for you to answer the questions: “Would I benefit from using fast and reliable CFD?”.
For more information on ANSYS Fluid Dynamics Software ROI, you can read the white paper http://bit.ly/ROICFD
TierPoint white paper_How_to_Position_Cloud_ROI_2015sllongo3
Traditional ROI calculators do an ineffective job of measuring the value of cloud services. This white paper serves as a guide to calculating cloud ROI using seven metrics you may not have considered.
If you are in FM and you're interested in BIM, come and see us at BIM SHow Live 2015. We are leading the way for FM involvement in the Building Information Management process. See our vision of future FM and give us your ideas.
Applications of artificial Intelligence in Mechanical Engineering.pdfAtif Razi
Historically, mechanical engineering has relied heavily on human expertise and empirical methods to solve complex problems. With the introduction of computer-aided design (CAD) and finite element analysis (FEA), the field took its first steps towards digitization. These tools allowed engineers to simulate and analyze mechanical systems with greater accuracy and efficiency. However, the sheer volume of data generated by modern engineering systems and the increasing complexity of these systems have necessitated more advanced analytical tools, paving the way for AI.
AI offers the capability to process vast amounts of data, identify patterns, and make predictions with a level of speed and accuracy unattainable by traditional methods. This has profound implications for mechanical engineering, enabling more efficient design processes, predictive maintenance strategies, and optimized manufacturing operations. AI-driven tools can learn from historical data, adapt to new information, and continuously improve their performance, making them invaluable in tackling the multifaceted challenges of modern mechanical engineering.
Digital Twins Computer Networking Paper Presentation.pptxaryanpankaj78
A Digital Twin in computer networking is a virtual representation of a physical network, used to simulate, analyze, and optimize network performance and reliability. It leverages real-time data to enhance network management, predict issues, and improve decision-making processes.
Secure, Strengthen, Automate, and Scale Modern Workloads with Red Hat & NGINXNGINX, Inc.
Learn how to support your application delivery – no matter where you are on the journey from monolithic apps to microservices.
Join this webinar to learn:
- About important considerations around digital innovation in FSI
- How to leverage automation and Ansible to deliver apps faster
- About keys to delivering modern apps securely and reliably anywhere
- How OpenShift takes the complexity out of containers
https://www.nginx.com/resources/webinars/secure-strengthen-automate-scale-modern-workloads-with-red-hat-nginx/
This newsletter provides updates on the growth and activities of the LinkedIn CFD professional group. The group has grown significantly in the past month to 75 members from diverse backgrounds and locations. A survey on common CFD pain points found that software expenses, mesh generation, and geometry cleanup are the top issues. The newsletter also provides a case study of AGCO's use of Exa's CFD software to optimize engine installation designs, reducing the number of physical prototypes. Finally, it announces the upcoming COMSOL conference and invites members to contribute news, events, and opinions to the newsletter.
Siemens SW Multidisciplinary simulation in the chemical and process industry.pdfEvgenyKulish1
The document discusses how computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation is becoming more widely used in the chemical and process industries. It describes a new workflow tool within Siemens' Simcenter STAR-CCM+ software that makes mixing vessel simulation more accessible to engineers. The mixing vessel workflow allows users to easily set up, run, and analyze mixing simulations. It handles geometry creation, meshing, solver setup and includes automated post-processing and parameterized designs to enable design space exploration. This new tool is lowering barriers to using CFD for engineers seeking to solve mixing problems and optimize chemical processes.
The document discusses the complexity of modern product development from designing to manufacturing. It describes the many software tools and processes involved in designing a simple product like a phone, including CAD, PDM, ERP systems. Manufacturing a product involves planning production using CAM and managing the supply chain. While technology helps, human judgment is still needed to integrate all parts of the process. Simplifying processes where possible and thinking through every step can help manage complexity.
This slide contains a brief presentation of how Organizations can leverage Cloud to virtualize functional/performance testing and cost benefit from investing in hardware.
Rio Info 2010 - Seminário de Tecnologia - Integracao de Servicos - Cesar Taur...Rio Info
Cezar Taurion discusses how cloud computing is transforming the IT industry. Cloud computing leverages virtualization, standardization, and automation to reduce costs while increasing capabilities. It allows resources to be provisioned in minutes and paid through metering/billing models. While infrastructure as a service is common, platforms and software as a service provide additional benefits. Both opportunities and challenges exist for companies and CIOs in adopting cloud computing strategies.
1. The document discusses 5 key topics about disaster recovery planning: mixed platforms in data centers, virtualization, cloud computing, cost savings through virtualization, and the importance of testing disaster recovery plans.
2. Virtualization can simplify disaster recovery planning by allowing a single virtual recovery platform to protect all workloads regardless of physical or virtual servers and operating systems.
3. Cloud computing is well-suited for disaster recovery needs due to its on-demand, elastic resource model that handles unexpected resource demands.
This document provides an overview of cloud computing, including its benefits, risks, and considerations for implementation. It discusses how cloud computing can reduce costs while accelerating innovation by providing on-demand access to resources and applications. However, it also notes security and compliance risks that must be addressed. The document provides guidance on evaluating cloud computing options and applications, asking the right questions of providers, and testing solutions before full deployment. The goal is to help organizations strategically decide when and how to adopt cloud computing services.
Cloud computing implications for project management methodologiesLivingstone Advisory
Cloud based technologies are becoming increasingly pervasive across society and are considered by many in business as the next major disruptive innovation. For the first time, organizations can consume, as needed, on-demand, business ready Cloud based enterprise services. This is also known as the Consumerization of IT.
Transitioning to, or deploying new IT systems and services using Cloud technologies present their own unique set of challenges to the IT Departments, Project managers and Pproject management Offices (PMO) alike.
The primary objective of this presentation is to provide a number of key considerations for Project Managers in dealing with projects involving Cloud computing technologies.
This was presented at the 25th International Project Management Institute's Global Conference in Australia on the 11th October 2011 by Rob Livingstone
#IBM Open technology platforms, pre-integrated and pre-tested systems, and optimised configurations that´s
IBM Cloud Infrastructure Alliance especially designed to help you accelerate your journey to the Cloud. Contact me for more details. #ibmcloud
How ci os-and-ctos-can-accelerate-digital-transformations-through-cloud-platf...Ketut Widya
This document discusses how CIOs and CTOs can accelerate digital transformations through cloud platforms. It outlines three key things companies need to do: 1) Focus cloud investments in business domains where cloud can increase revenues and margins; 2) Select a technology and sourcing model aligned with business strategy; and 3) Develop an operating model oriented around the cloud. Traditional cloud implementations that focus on siloed initiatives or "lift and shift" migrations fail to capture cloud's full value. Companies must treat cloud adoption as a business-technology transformation affecting many parts of the organization.
The cloud computing paradigm has achieved widespread adoption in recent years. Its success is due largely to customers’ ability to use services on demand with a pay-as-you go pricing model, which has proved convenient in many respects. Low costs and high flexibility make migrating to the cloud compelling. Despite its obvious advantages, however, many companies hesitate to “move to the cloud,” mainly because of concerns related to service availability, data lock-in, and legal uncertainties. Lock in is particularly problematic. For one thing, even though public cloud availability is generally high, outages still occur
Businesses locked into such a cloud are essentially at a standstill until the cloud is back online. Moreover, public cloud providers generally don’t guarantee particular service level agreements (SLAs) — that is, businesses locked into a cloud have no guarantees that it will continue to provide the required quality of service (QoS). Finally, most public cloud providers’ terms of service let that provider unilaterally change pricing at any time. Hence, a business locked into a cloud has no mid- or long term control over its own IT costs. At the core of all these problems, we can identify a need for businesses to permanently monitor the cloud they’re using and be able to rapidly “change horses” — that is, migrate to a different cloud if they discover problems or if their estimates predict future issues.
This document discusses how cloud computing can provide enterprises with new levels of collaboration, agility, speed, and cost savings. It outlines four key actions every CIO should take to capitalize on cloud computing: 1) build on-premises cloud services, 2) consume off-premises cloud services securely, 3) manage and secure applications and cloud assets across delivery models, and 4) transform legacy infrastructure and applications. The document also summarizes HP's cloud services portfolio and solutions that can help enterprises implement a hybrid cloud delivery model.
This newsletter provides an update on the LinkedIn CFD professional networking group. The group has grown to 227 members from various fields and locations. A discussion group has been created on Google to facilitate communication between members instead of mass emails. The newsletter also announces an upcoming Pointwise user meeting and a career opportunity at a combustion research company. It discusses how CFD is being used more for design through easier-to-use software that integrates with CAD programs. Member input is requested to help guide the group.
One of the most useful design analysis tools now being used in the HVAC industry is something called "CFD". "CFD" stands for "Computational Fluid Dynamics"
The Return on Investment of Computational Fluid DynamicsAnsys
Measuring the ROI of Fast and Reliable Computational
Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is not always straightforward. In this presentation, we are demonstrating the positive ROI of CFD using different point of views.
(1) Advantages and cost-savings of using CFD simulation both early and often during the development.
(2) Avoiding costly downtime or product failures.
(3) The ROI of CFD simulation to optimize product performance.
(4) The cost of choosing the wrong simulation tool.
(5) Some tips for you to answer the questions: “Would I benefit from using fast and reliable CFD?”.
For more information on ANSYS Fluid Dynamics Software ROI, you can read the white paper http://bit.ly/ROICFD
TierPoint white paper_How_to_Position_Cloud_ROI_2015sllongo3
Traditional ROI calculators do an ineffective job of measuring the value of cloud services. This white paper serves as a guide to calculating cloud ROI using seven metrics you may not have considered.
If you are in FM and you're interested in BIM, come and see us at BIM SHow Live 2015. We are leading the way for FM involvement in the Building Information Management process. See our vision of future FM and give us your ideas.
Applications of artificial Intelligence in Mechanical Engineering.pdfAtif Razi
Historically, mechanical engineering has relied heavily on human expertise and empirical methods to solve complex problems. With the introduction of computer-aided design (CAD) and finite element analysis (FEA), the field took its first steps towards digitization. These tools allowed engineers to simulate and analyze mechanical systems with greater accuracy and efficiency. However, the sheer volume of data generated by modern engineering systems and the increasing complexity of these systems have necessitated more advanced analytical tools, paving the way for AI.
AI offers the capability to process vast amounts of data, identify patterns, and make predictions with a level of speed and accuracy unattainable by traditional methods. This has profound implications for mechanical engineering, enabling more efficient design processes, predictive maintenance strategies, and optimized manufacturing operations. AI-driven tools can learn from historical data, adapt to new information, and continuously improve their performance, making them invaluable in tackling the multifaceted challenges of modern mechanical engineering.
Digital Twins Computer Networking Paper Presentation.pptxaryanpankaj78
A Digital Twin in computer networking is a virtual representation of a physical network, used to simulate, analyze, and optimize network performance and reliability. It leverages real-time data to enhance network management, predict issues, and improve decision-making processes.
Build the Next Generation of Apps with the Einstein 1 Platform.
Rejoignez Philippe Ozil pour une session de workshops qui vous guidera à travers les détails de la plateforme Einstein 1, l'importance des données pour la création d'applications d'intelligence artificielle et les différents outils et technologies que Salesforce propose pour vous apporter tous les bénéfices de l'IA.
Discover the latest insights on Data Driven Maintenance with our comprehensive webinar presentation. Learn about traditional maintenance challenges, the right approach to utilizing data, and the benefits of adopting a Data Driven Maintenance strategy. Explore real-world examples, industry best practices, and innovative solutions like FMECA and the D3M model. This presentation, led by expert Jules Oudmans, is essential for asset owners looking to optimize their maintenance processes and leverage digital technologies for improved efficiency and performance. Download now to stay ahead in the evolving maintenance landscape.
Introduction- e - waste – definition - sources of e-waste– hazardous substances in e-waste - effects of e-waste on environment and human health- need for e-waste management– e-waste handling rules - waste minimization techniques for managing e-waste – recycling of e-waste - disposal treatment methods of e- waste – mechanism of extraction of precious metal from leaching solution-global Scenario of E-waste – E-waste in India- case studies.
Optimizing Gradle Builds - Gradle DPE Tour Berlin 2024Sinan KOZAK
Sinan from the Delivery Hero mobile infrastructure engineering team shares a deep dive into performance acceleration with Gradle build cache optimizations. Sinan shares their journey into solving complex build-cache problems that affect Gradle builds. By understanding the challenges and solutions found in our journey, we aim to demonstrate the possibilities for faster builds. The case study reveals how overlapping outputs and cache misconfigurations led to significant increases in build times, especially as the project scaled up with numerous modules using Paparazzi tests. The journey from diagnosing to defeating cache issues offers invaluable lessons on maintaining cache integrity without sacrificing functionality.
Electric vehicle and photovoltaic advanced roles in enhancing the financial p...IJECEIAES
Climate change's impact on the planet forced the United Nations and governments to promote green energies and electric transportation. The deployments of photovoltaic (PV) and electric vehicle (EV) systems gained stronger momentum due to their numerous advantages over fossil fuel types. The advantages go beyond sustainability to reach financial support and stability. The work in this paper introduces the hybrid system between PV and EV to support industrial and commercial plants. This paper covers the theoretical framework of the proposed hybrid system including the required equation to complete the cost analysis when PV and EV are present. In addition, the proposed design diagram which sets the priorities and requirements of the system is presented. The proposed approach allows setup to advance their power stability, especially during power outages. The presented information supports researchers and plant owners to complete the necessary analysis while promoting the deployment of clean energy. The result of a case study that represents a dairy milk farmer supports the theoretical works and highlights its advanced benefits to existing plants. The short return on investment of the proposed approach supports the paper's novelty approach for the sustainable electrical system. In addition, the proposed system allows for an isolated power setup without the need for a transmission line which enhances the safety of the electrical network
VARIABLE FREQUENCY DRIVE. VFDs are widely used in industrial applications for...PIMR BHOPAL
Variable frequency drive .A Variable Frequency Drive (VFD) is an electronic device used to control the speed and torque of an electric motor by varying the frequency and voltage of its power supply. VFDs are widely used in industrial applications for motor control, providing significant energy savings and precise motor operation.
Prediction of Electrical Energy Efficiency Using Information on Consumer's Ac...PriyankaKilaniya
Energy efficiency has been important since the latter part of the last century. The main object of this survey is to determine the energy efficiency knowledge among consumers. Two separate districts in Bangladesh are selected to conduct the survey on households and showrooms about the energy and seller also. The survey uses the data to find some regression equations from which it is easy to predict energy efficiency knowledge. The data is analyzed and calculated based on five important criteria. The initial target was to find some factors that help predict a person's energy efficiency knowledge. From the survey, it is found that the energy efficiency awareness among the people of our country is very low. Relationships between household energy use behaviors are estimated using a unique dataset of about 40 households and 20 showrooms in Bangladesh's Chapainawabganj and Bagerhat districts. Knowledge of energy consumption and energy efficiency technology options is found to be associated with household use of energy conservation practices. Household characteristics also influence household energy use behavior. Younger household cohorts are more likely to adopt energy-efficient technologies and energy conservation practices and place primary importance on energy saving for environmental reasons. Education also influences attitudes toward energy conservation in Bangladesh. Low-education households indicate they primarily save electricity for the environment while high-education households indicate they are motivated by environmental concerns.
Mechanical Engineering on AAI Summer Training Report-003.pdf
10 myths of cfd
1. M e c h a n i c a l a n a l y s i s
WhitePaper
w w w . m e n t o r . c o m
The 10 Myths of
Computational
Fluid Dynamics
Drs. Ivo Weinhold & John Parry,
Mentor Graphics, Mechanical Analysis Division
2. The 10 Myths of Computational Fluid Dynamics
www.mentor.com/mechanical
2 [9]
How the 5 Myths of CFD have evolved to become 10
Introduction
Some five years ago we felt compelled to write our whitepaper “The Five Myths of Computational Fluid Dynamics”
[1]. Since then, we have had quite a lot of feedback regarding our views, and broadly, our debunking of these myths
resonated with people. Through all the feedback and conversations we’ve had on this topic, it’s become clear that
the situation is more complex than we first thought. After spending some time to cogitate on this, we felt
compelled to write an addendum to “The Five Myths…”. Here, we provide a summary of the original myths,
introduce four new related myths, and add a completely new one.
Summarizing “The 5 Myths of Computational Fluid Dynamics”
Since we wrote the “The Five Myths…” quite a lot has happened in the CFD market, so before summarizing these
myths we should clarify the scope of this whitepaper. Our comments relate specifically to the broadest section of
the CFD market, that of commercial general-purpose CFD software solving the Navier-Stokes equations. We are
deliberately excluding so-called meshless approaches using Lattice-Boltzmann methods, and application-specific
CFD such as tools for injection moulding, electronics cooling, data center simulation, etc. where their tailored
functionality delivers a different value proposition to customers. So, to recap:
Myth #1: CFD is too difficult to be used in the design process
This myth has a historical basis. Like FEA codes in the distant past, CFD codes of the 1980s and 1990s were difficult
to use. Fit-for-purpose meshing, choice of solution numerics, turbulence modeling, achieving and judging solution
convergence, assuring result fidelity, and correct result interpretation were all once expert-only activities. Today, the
skills a mechanical designer needs to operate the CFD software are simply knowledge of the CAD system and the
physics pertaining to the product, both of which the majority of design engineers already possess.
Figure 1: CAD-embedded CFD package FloEFD for Siemens NX
3. The 10 Myths of Computational Fluid Dynamics
www.mentor.com/mechanical
3 [9]
This is because the automation and overall usability of the tools has increased so much [2]. However, the
importance of usability is largely misunderstood; and in this, we have discovered a new myth: Myth #6 – Usability is
not a prerequisite for a reliable and reproducible workflow.
Myth #2: CFD takes too long to use during the design process
The greatest time sink for CFD has always been the meshing process, with a considerable amount of manual
intervention needed to achieve acceptable mesh quality by eliminating gaps and overlaps, reducing skewness,
aspect ratio, warpage, and controlling the volume of individual cells (cell size ratio to neighbor cells, smallest cell
size, and mesh distribution). As design inherently involves changing geometry, this semi-manual process had to be
repeated for each design iteration. All of these steps can now be fully automated using native 3D CAD data directly
for fluid flow simulations without the need for translations or copies. New parts and features resulting from design
changes can be meshed in a matter of minutes, dramatically reducing the time required for analysis.
Acceptance of this has, however, revealed another myth: Myth #7 – Accuracy has to be sacrificed to use CFD during
the design process.
Myth #3: CFD is too expensive to be used by mechanical designers
In our original whitepaper, we observed that traditional CFD codes cost in the region of $25,000 to lease for one
year. The latest generation of CFD code intended for use during the mainstream design process cost around
$25,000 for a perpetual license. The only ongoing cost is a maintenance fee on the order of 18% ($4,500) per year.
The cost of ownership is further reduced because it can be used by a mechanical design engineer with minimal
training1
. Novel techniques, such as immersed boundary treatments for fluid–solid surface friction and heat transfer,
massively reduce the mesh count required to achieve accurate results, allowing useful work to be undertaken on
multicore personal computers and laptops, reducing the cost still further.
Figure 2: Efficient thermal simulation of an electronics enclosure
1
That is training in the use of the tool. Knowledge of fluid flow and heat transfer appropriate to the application is necessary, but not a detailed
knowledge of CFD.
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This myth proved relatively uncontroversial; however, it relates to a third new myth: Myth #8 - Experts are needed
to get accurate CFD simulation results.
Myth #4: You can’t directly use your CAD model to do CFD analysis
In the past, it was necessary to copy or translate the CAD model to a different program and then modify it
substantially to create the CFD model. Many people found it more reliable and less effort to start from scratch by
recreating the geometry within the CFD program, despite this involving a considerable expenditure of time and
introducing an additional and significant source of error.
Figure 3: Cost-effective CFD - Simulation of an automotive turbo charger
Figure 4: Direct use of native CAD geometry for CFD simulations
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Today, native 3D CAD data can be used directly for flow simulations without the need for translations or copies, or
creating phantom “objects” in the feature tree to represent the flow spaces. The myth that CAD geometry can’t be
used directly for analysis persists today, but in a slightly different guise, giving us our fourth new myth: Myth #9 -
Production CAD is too complex to use for analysis.
Myth #5: Most products don’t need CFD analysis
We judge this myth to have been largely consigned to history. It is apparent that, today, CFD is used to improve
products as diverse as swimming pools, toilets, hand dryers, lawn sprinklers, gas meters, production printing
systems, disk drives, and oil filters to name just a few applications. Although not yet complete, the democratization
of CFD for use in product design has extended into undergraduate courses and even to high school programs [3, 4].
At this point, we would like to introduce the new, or at least newly identified, myths of CFD that have come to our
attention.
Introducing Five New Myths of Computational Fluid Dynamics
Myth #6: Usability is not a prerequisite for a reliable and reproducible workflow
We were perhaps remiss in not covering this last time. However, its resilience and the passage of time have made
this myth clearer. Indeed, there seems to be a school of thought that CFD should be (perhaps reassuringly) difficult
to use.
A high level of usability reduces the mental effort needed to drive the tool, leading to less mistakes, smoother
workflows, higher efficiency, greater motivation and engagement, and happier designers and engineers. Usability
does not hinder experts, but supports both experts and non-experts, making quality and reliability less dependent
on individual performance.
Usability is a prerequisite for reliable, reproducible high-quality CFD results because mistakes can arise from a
number of sources and are easy to make. Mistakes are almost inevitable when the engineer is required to perform
hundreds, if not thousands, of separate operations required to build a CFD model from first principles, starting from
importing the exported CAD geometry, with decisions taken on how to fix and/or simplify the geometry during the
import process. By wrapping up multiple operations into fewer higher-level ones, operator variability is drastically
reduced, making best practice guidelines easier to both define and implement.
Figure 5: CFD simulation of a bob skeleton ride, used
to optimize the sled design (Bromley Technologies)
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A focus on usability reduces the number of possible paths through the software, making it easier to fully test new
features and how they operate in conjunction with existing functionality. From a software development
perspective, the more possible combinations of settings that are selectable within the software, the more difficult,
time-consuming, and costly it is for the vendor to test; thus, these costs are passed on to their customers. As new
features are added, feature set combinations explode, making achieving full code test coverage extremely
challenging if not impossible. This makes upgrading to new versions risky for customers, requiring them to undergo
lengthy acceptance testing before migrating to a new version, further increasing the cost of ownership. So, the
costs described in Myth 3 are really just the tip of the iceberg.
Myth #7: Accuracy has to be sacrificed to use CFD during the design process
This seems logical, following the “do you want it right or do you want it fast?” line of reasoning. It follows from
Myth #2, because getting the “right answer” has been assumed to take too long to keep pace with the design
changes. To understand the nature of this myth, we have to review briefly the technological development of CFD.
Traditional CFD has taken the approach of attempting to resolve everything on the volume mesh. This was not
always the case. Years ago, limited computing power meant that wall functions were the only way to represent the
effect of the boundary layer between the solid surface and the bulk flow. These wall functions were originally
applied only in the near-wall cell. Using mesh to resolve the boundary layer was prohibitively expensive, and the
result quality achievable on any tractable mesh for all but the simplest of situations was far inferior to what could
be achieved using empirically based wall functions, which could be further refined to account for surface
roughness [5].
Improvements in computing power have been the enabler for the use of ever-finer meshes to improve result
quality. The emergence of structured body-fitted meshes in the 1980s allowed the original Cartesian approach to
CFD to be applied directly to 2D aerofoils using wraparound grids.
Figure 6: Usability of CAD-embedded CFD: Line Graphs shown in CATIA V5
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Such meshes were highly orthogonal2
. When the approach was applied in 3D to irregularly shaped objects using
unstructured meshes, non-orthogonality of the mesh meant that the construction of face-based fluxes needed to
solve the mass, heat, and momentum balances for each cell was far more complex, and more critically, also
involved significant mathematical approximations [6].
Small discrepancies between physical reality and simulation result for a mesh cell were transmitted to the
neighbour cells by convection and diffusion as a natural part of the solution. Compounded across the mesh, this
compromised overall solution accuracy. Solution convergence was also much harder to achieve. The effect of the
variation in mesh quality was such that the physical effects of minor geometric variations were masked. This issue
has plagued traditional body-fitted CFD ever since.
The industry has, of course, risen to the challenge in various ways: Increases in computing performance have
allowed ever finer meshes to be used. More mesh allows the variation in size and shape from one mesh cell to the
next to be reduced, improving orthogonality. Considerable effort has continued to be expended on the
development of automated3
mesh generators, allowing mixtures of hexahedra, tetrahedral, and prisms to be used.
More recently, polyhedral meshes, which have better orthogonality properties for any arbitrary flow direction4
,
have been constructed, e.g., by aggregating tetrahedra. Finally, more sophisticated numerical schemes that
improve the estimation of cell face fluxes and pressure coupling have been devised.
2
Meaning that a line joining the cell centers is perpendicular to the cell face, so calculation of cell-face fluxes for mass and momentum are simply
the dot product of the area, velocity, and upstream fluid density.
3
Meaning only that the mesh is constructed according to an algorithmic method, not that it is fully automatic.
4
Important for Large Eddy Simulation (LES) where eddies cause the local flow direction to fluctuate over time.
Figure 7: Validation of a cyclone simulation for Pressure Drop and Grade Efficiency Prediction
Straightener
Tangential inlet
Deflecting cone
Bunker
Dust outlet
Cone
Barrel
Pressure drops of the cyclone under various temperatures
Grade efficiency curves under volume flow rate of
60 m3
/h and various air temperatures
Vortex Finder
Overflow
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In all but the highest fidelity cases, great accuracy can be achieved using conventional turbulence models with an
immersed boundary treatment for wall friction and heat transfer [7]. This approach is around 100-times less
expensive than traditional body-fitted RANS-based CFD, but delivers the same, or better, result accuracy [8]. It is
perhaps for this reason, in recent years, Cartesian-based immersed-boundary codes have become popular, with a
number of new market entrants [9]. Embedding this technology within CAD systems maximizes the benefit for
industrial engineers, and by virtue of the CAD system being fully integrated into the PLM system, has the added
benefit of minimizing the data management headache for engineering managers. CAD-embedded =>
PLM-embedded.
As noted above, using traditional CFD tools can take a long time and a lot of manual effort to construct and
optimize the mesh to get the sufficient mesh quality and density for usefully accurate simulation results.
The new generation of CFD software, however, comes with key technologies that allow high-quality results to be
obtained fast. In a matter of a few minutes, it is possible to construct an octree Cartesian-based mesh that
automatically refines around solid–solid and solid–fluid interfaces, sidestepping the need to separately generate
surface and volume meshes. Designers can control mesh density with a single slider, maximizing ease-of-use.
Being Cartesian, the mesh has the highest possible numerical mesh quality, because the cells in Cartesian and
Cartesian-based meshes are perfectly orthogonal [6, 10]. Hence, it is not possible to improve the mesh quality
through manual intervention. This unparalleled ease-of-use actually leads to a significant improvement of result
accuracy, because the fidelity of the CFD simulation no longer has to be limited by project time constraints. In an
industrial setting, engineers who are using traditional CFD do not have time to refine y+
values across the whole
model even when the geometry is relatively simple. The more complex the geometry, the greater the benefit
obtained from using octree Cartesian meshing. Octree Cartesian meshes are highly suited to solution-adaptive
mesh refinement, where the mesh self-refines as the solution progresses to ensure that gradients are adequately
captured, for example, in shock capture.
Figure 8: Validation of a micro turbine engine simulation performed with FloEFD
The model of KJ 66 engine in FloEFD Fluid temperature distribution at two longitudinal
sections with flow vectors at the normal mode
Air mass flow at the inlet of KJ 66 engine
Pressure surface distributions in the engine Velocity distribution at two longitudinal
sections with flow vectors at the normal mode
Thrust of KJ 66 engine
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Myth #8: Experts are needed to get accurate CFD simulation results
This myth still partly applies to traditional CFD, helping preserve Myth 1 within a broad cross-section of the CFD
community, because near full-time use is required to gain and maintain a high level of proficiency. It is interesting
that any two experts will always5
produce a different simulation result for any realistically complex industrial
problem. They will generally disagree on whose result is the best one. This debunks the last line of defense in the
argument for the involvement of expert analysts—that they are needed to check the results produced by
non-experts.
Building in ease-of-use lowers the level of simulation-specific expertise needed, thereby allowing engineers to
focus on the engineering problem. The numerical and physical modeling expertise of the software developers is
accessed by the design engineer via the automation provided within the tool. Inputs are limited to what needs to
be known about the problem being described: boundary conditions, materials, etc. applied directly to the native
3D geometry within the CAD system. Thus, non-simulation experts can get reliable, repeatable, high-quality
simulation results.
As noted in the footnote earlier, an appropriate engineering background and domain expertise are necessary to
understand the application being addressed to leverage the simulation results and improve the product design.
However, automated optimization is already reducing the level of domain expertise needed to make design
improvements. CAD-embedded CFD provides both parametric study and result comparison capabilities making
design improvements easy to investigate.
We are in no way belittling the value of analysis experts. Such people are the very reason that CFD has grown to
become what it is today, pioneering new applications that have driven the development of new physical and
numerical models, etc. In late design, when the geometry is stable, traditional CFD can be applied, leveraging the
Figure 9: Teenage students used FloEFD for ‘F1 in Schools’ competition
5
This is an axiom rather than a fact, as no two experts have to date independently achieved exactly the same simulation result for a real world
engineering problem.
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availability of analysis-ready CAD which is refined using a CAD-embedded CFD solution, to provide further design
verification if desired. Alternatively, analysis experts can themselves use CAD-embedded CFD during design. CAD-
embedded CFD and traditional CFD can, and arguably should, complement one another. CAD-embedded CFD also
integrates well with other CAE tools used in product design, allowing temperature data to be exported as a thermal
load for use in Creo Simulation and NASTRAN-based FEA solvers, among others, helping to accelerate other aspects
of the design.
Myth #9: Production CAD is too complex to use for analysis
When working with exported CAD geometry, fitness for analysis depends greatly on how the original CAD model
was created, the quality of the translator used to convert it into some neutral file format, the neutral format chosen,
and how well the target analysis tool’s CAD import handles the import of that particular format. Unfortunately,
once a CAD assembly is exported, much if not all of the parametric and history information (i.e., the software
history of how the assembly, parts, and their features was built) is lost; and with it, the ability easily to detect and fix
design mistakes is massively impaired. At this point, simplification and reconstruction of parts of the assembly can
be the only option, both of which can give rise to errors.
Working with native CAD inside the MCAD system is a different story. Mistakes can be detected and fixed once
only, and with relative ease directly within the main design workflow so the analysis geometry and design
geometry are always in sync.
Concurrent CAD-embedded CFD tools based on Cartesian meshing are also highly tolerant to CAD errors, because
a surface mesh is not required as part of the analysis process. Furthermore, minor features present in the CAD
model that have no significance for the CFD analysis can be neglected by not using a sufficiently fine local mesh to
resolve them. Conversely, small features such as joins and small gaps can be resolved to investigate their effect on
the flow performance of the system. In CFD, small features often have a marked effect on flow performance, for
example, by causing boundary layers to “trip” and the flow to separate. Geometry simplification is not needed;
however, it is not prevented. It is relatively easy to prepare the geometry for efficient yet accurate analysis by using
either the feature tree to control parts and features, and/or the de-featuring capabilities of the CAD system.
Figure 10: Complex 3D geometry used for CFD simulations
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Myth #10: Concurrent (CAD-embedded) CFD tools lack sophistication
This myth is based on the assumption that it is not possible to automate many of the more sophisticated features
available in traditional CFD, and hence CFD tools that employ a high degree of automation must therefore exclude
a lot of capabilities. The source of this myth is unknown. It may be grounded in the past experiences of analyst
experts, gained years ago with stripped-down versions of traditional CFD tools, marketed as being for use with a
particular CAD system; or it may be based on experiences of engineering designers using upfront CFD tools that
also used body-fitted meshes; or it could be a combination of the two.
Despite the simplicity of the interface, CAD-embedded tools do not lack sophistication. Most, if not all, physical
phenomena that are important to include in simulations involving fluid flow and heat transfer using CFD can be
modeled using CAD-embedded CFD tools. Because of the direct access to 3D CAD data through underlying CAD
kernel functions, it is possible to employ sophisticated algorithms for identifying the computational domain(s),
generate mesh, intelligently apply physical conditions, and automatically adapt the solver configuration to capture
the local physical situation, including solution adaptive meshing as mentioned earlier.
The choice to activate what might be considered as sophisticated CFD features – cavitation, combustion,
condensation, water film evolution, erosion/accretion, non-Newtonian liquids, transonic, supersonic and hypersonic
flows, moving/rotating parts, full conjugate heat transfer, radiation with spectral characteristics, refraction,
reflection, and absorption (including solar radiation), Joule heating, and even the Peltier effect in thermoelectric
devices – are all available as standard features, described using language that is familiar to any engineer.
Closing Remarks
We stand by our five original myths, and hope our revision has given you pause for thought. We invite you to think
about these issues and give us your considered feedback.
If you have not yet considered using CFD to help your product design, we invite you to try our CAD-embedded
Cartesian-based immersed boundary approach. For those of you that have experience of traditional body-fitted
CFD and have a healthy scepticism of our approach, we say “just try it!” and sign up for a one-month trial [11].
Figure 11: CAD-embedded CFD uses complex physical models to predict the thermal behavior of a motorcycle headlight