June 5, 2017
Composites are reaching a new level of celebrity in the materials world. As research advances, engineers and material scientists are finding benefits for lightweighting applications and customizable designs. Such characteristics make composites a good candidate for design refinement and optimization, and serve as a one reason why Bertram Stier, research engineer of advanced composites at Collier Research, chose them as the basis for several new bike designs.
“I’ve been a very enthusiastic mountain biker for years,” he says. “The future of bike design is moving toward optimizing the structure of every type of frame so it can be manufactured with the correct amount of stiffness and performance. This is exciting because bikes will increasingly be made from less material with shorter development times—and we’ll all be able to enjoy the benefits of what are now considered exotic materials.”
The company also decided that this bike frame application would be a good “gold standard” for developing a program that would help engineers use composites in everyday products, not just industrial designs.
Because there’s a massive variety of materials and material allowables, working with composites can create one (or several) mechanical engineering problems, Stier says. To add to the list of conflicting requirements, there are restrictions posed by various manufacturing methods as well as strength and stiffness requirements within the design. And, there is added variety in design that can change from designer to designer—adding a personal touch.
Yet, the benefits of composites outweigh the challenges, Stier says. choosing to work with composites can help ensure the structural integrity of the design. Materials can meet the exacting demands for strength and stiffness that high-performance designs require.
“You can increase the structural performance by swapping out the material because you can specifically tailor the materials at different locations by defining or optimizing the ply shapes and best direction [and type] of fiber. You have much more freedom,” he says.
This freedom for characteristics change can lead to less material usage and lower density of materials, ultimately saving weight and increasing durability throughout the design—a far reach from traditional frames that generally just vary in width of tubes and type of metal.
A Tool for All
When working with optimization software, Stier turned to a program familiar to him: HyperSizer. Collier Research’s flagship software is available in Pro and Express versions. The software was originally developed for analysis at NASA, making it a high-level optimization and analysis program for aerospace and spacecraft applications.
Although they run the same code, Stier chose to work with HyperSizer Express because it simplifies the optimization process and provides the essential tools for optimization—making it more digestible for non-aerospace composite applications. “The entire concept of how you model things is different. You have a much wider design space that is less restricted [than aerospace design], which makes the optimization itself more challenging,” he says.
“In HyperSizer Express, we have a very streamlined workflow to [combine requirements] for you,” Stier says. The workflow starts by importing a finite element model and going step by step through the optimization problem. This not only helps save quite a bit of time, according to Stier, but also allows users to easily add or remove optimization constraints and requirements as needed throughout the design process.
With the program, there’s a graphical user interface (GUI) that shows all possible strengths and criteria types that may be needed during the optimization process and workflow. Because the Express version is designed for non-experts and experts, it is easily configurable for adjusting requirements by selecting or deselecting types of analysis as project needs adjust. “That makes it actually very simple to use, you can just say ‘I believe this criteria is what I want to account for in my design process,’ select it and move on,” Stier says. “You do not need to be an expert.”
When working with his bike designs, Stier says that the most useful features within HyperSizer include the large variety of strength criteria already embedded within the software, as well as the static stiffness constraint. By having capabilities already built into the software, he says that the users don’t need to spend time individually defining the criteria because it’s readily available and integrates itself into a guided optimization process.
Going forward, Stier says tools for transient/highly dynamic loads would be most beneficial to develop to help predict mechanical waves propagating through a bike structure. He says that there are current concepts with equivalent static loads to help serve as somewhat of a basis for optimization, but it’s still in the early development stages. “The accuracy of these types of analysis and performance of optimization products that are out there is not as great as it is for static loads,” he says.
Further Adoption
So where should the industry focus to bring optimization software to the forefront of the design process? Stier says there are three main areas: education, time and software.
For optimization education, the math isn’t always integrated into standard engineering curriculums, but only in mathematic-specific programs. This leads to the software speaking a language more understandable to mathematicians than engineers. “Optimization is not necessarily a big subject yet that every engineer has to take,” Stier says. “That already narrows down the base of people who can use it.”
In addition to the hurdle of specialized knowledge, time constraints also come into play. With increasing product complexity, many engineers aren’t going to want to sit down and do extensive math to figure out an optimized design; their job is to create and manufacture things. Still, people who want to do optimization at least do a basic analysis of their product with simulation, Stier says.
Additionally, software for optimization to date has been incredibly complicated for engineers to use. “A lot of optimization software speaks more the language of mathematicians, even though it is a software made for engineers,” Stier says. This is what HyperSizer Express achieves by having simulation analyses serve as the basis for these optimization models. The user answers questions that make sense for an engineer to ask throughout the design process.
“The perception of engineers out there is: ‘Optimization is nice, but it does not do the job right. It does not help in my day-to-day work. It does not give me an answer that I can really produce,’” Stier says. “That is what we are taking into account for [with HyperSizer Express]. We are restricting the design space in a way that you end up with a manufacturable design.”
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Jess LulkaJess Lulka is a former associate editor for Digital Engineering. Contact her via de-editors@digitaleng.news.
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