No more trial and error: CAD-embedded CFD helps save
months in automotive valve design.
Ventrex Automotive GmbH, of Graz, Austria, saved four months in the
design of an automotive valve by taking advantage of Flomeric's
EFD.V5 for Dassault Systemes CATIA V5-embedded computational fluid
dynamics (CFD) simulation software.
"In the past, we would have had to build and test at least 50
valves in order to get the design right," says Peter Pfaffenwimmer,
project manager for Ventrex Automotive GmbH.
"CAD-embedded CFD made it possible to determine simulation
results nearly as fast as we changed the design," says Daniel
Gaisbacher, also a project manager for Ventrex. "The result is that
we were able to improve the flow rate of our new valve by 15 percent
while eliminating about 50 prototypes and reducing time to market by
four months."
Automotive air conditioning systems are beginning to use C[O.sub.2]
as the refrigerant because it does not damage the ozone layer and also
has a low impact on global warming. But C[O.sub.2]-based systems need to
operate at pressures seven to 10 times higher than previous generation
systems, and this requires redesign of many components.
[ILLUSTRATIONS OMITTED]
Among the components most affected by the change is the valves used
to evacuate and charge the system. Most important, the pressure drops
seen in existing valves are too high to enable the required flow rates.
But reducing the pressure drop of valves is challenging because of the
complexity of internal flow passages caused by the presence of
components used to open and close the valve.
In the past, engineers would make design changes based on educated
guesses. For each design change they had to build and test a prototype
of the valve. This process was time-consuming and expensive, and the
test results did not provide diagnostic information that would help
engineers determine whether or not the design change had the intended
effect.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
CFD makes it possible to build a software prototype of the valve
that can be solved to determine the pressure drop of any particular
design iteration without having to build a prototype. A drawback to its
use has been that traditional CFD codes require the user to understand
deeply the computational aspects of fluid dynamics in order to be
certain of obtaining accurate results.
But EFD.V5 eases the simulation process by extending CATIA V5
functionality to include fluid flow and heat transfer simulation within
a single-user environment.
"We selected EFD.V5 because it simplifies the process of
performing fluid flow analysis to the point where it can be accomplished
by any engineer," Gaisbacher says. "By using CFD software that
is embedded into our CAD software, we could evaluate the performance of
each new design iteration almost as fast as we could conceive it. This
made it possible to quickly improve the performance of the design."
He says the company reduced pressure drop to the point that flow
rate improved by about 15 percent in the final design at any given
pressure.
"We reduced the number of prototypes that were required during
the design process by about 50, which saved a considerable amount of
money, but most importantly let us bring the product to market
faster," Gaisbacher says. Fiomeries Group PLC,
www.rsleads.eom/809tp-151; Dassault Systemes, www.rsleads. com/809tp-150
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