Plies
Ply entities define a FEA ply which is the FEA correlation to a physical ply.
Physical
plies manufacture laminates which make up composite structures. A physical ply has
attributes of material, shape (area), thickness, and fiber orientation; where its shape is
any complex flat pattern that can be cut from a roll of material. Similarly, a FEA ply is
composed of the same data attributes as a physical ply (material, shape/area, thickness, and
fiber orientation). The shape of a FEA ply can either be defined by closed lines or
approximated from the elements which most closely represent its actual complex shape. In the
case where plies are defined on lines, perform a realization to convert this information
into a definition by elements. Ply data defined on lines is imported from Catia Composites
Parts Design (CPD) data.
- Plies defined by elements
- The shape (area) of an FEA ply is defined by selecting elements which most closely represent the complex shape of a physical ply. In Figure 1, an elliptical physical ply shape is defined by the brown line. The corresponding FEA ply shape is defined by the gray shaded elements of the associated FEA mesh. Typically, if an element's centroid exists within the bounds of the physical ply shape, that element is considered part of the FEA ply shape.
- Plies defined by lines
- Plies can be defined by selecting lines which build a closed area. If CPD data is imported from Catia files, plies are defined on lines.
The ply thickness is typically defined as the final cured thickness of a single
ply of material. In addition, the ply can be made of any material: isotropic, orthotropic,
anisotropic, or any other material law.
The fiber orientation of a ply defines the direction fibers lay within that
ply. The ply fiber orientation is typically an integer value between -90 and 90. The fiber
orientation of a ply is always defined relative to each elements material direction using
right hand rule around the elements normal, or thru-thickness direction, to define positive
angles. Even though a ply's fiber orientation is a constant integer, element material
directions can vary from element to element, and this allows varying fiber directions within
a ply to be modeled. Element material directions are defined differently from solver
interface to solver interface.
Once all of the plies which make up a composite structure are defined, just as in the actual hand-layup manufacturing process, plies are stacked in a specific given order within the laminate entity to define a laminate of the structure. It is possible to stack plies, whether they are defined based on geometry or elements.
Turn the display of plies on/off or change the way plies appear in the modeling window with the Ply layers display setting, which can be accessed from the Mesh Display settings on the View Controls toolbar.