Water Tank Paper

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    Structural Analysis of a Water Tank

    Prepared by

    Emre Turkoz, BSME

    Can Ozcan, MSME

    [email protected]@akroengineering.com

    AKRO R&D Ltd.

    Phone: +90 (262) 678-7215

    KEMAL NEHROZOGLU CAD. GOSB TEKNOPARK

    HIGH TECH BINA 3.KAT B5

    GEBZE/KOCAELI/TURKEY - 41480

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]
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    1. IntroductionStructural analysis of a water tank is a common task in manufacturing industry as it is necessary to keep

    the design within standards, keep costs down and provide a robust & reliable design. It is also an

    interesting finite element analysis problem, since it requires the utilization of the shell meshing

    technology for accurate stress calculation; where a common solid meshing strategy turns out to be

    harder to implement and impractical regarding the computational cost for matching the accuracy levels

    of the calculations.

    The purpose of this analysis is to investigate the displacement and stress distributions which exist due to

    tanksown weight and fluid contained resulting in hydrodynamic pressure within. Effects of changing

    sheet metal thickness and the number of equally spaced supports beneath the tank are studied.

    Displacements and safety factors against yielding are also documented.

    Autodesk Simulation Mechanical 2012 is used to perform this analysis.

    2. Problem SetupThe tank under consideration is 6m high and has the

    capacity of containing 50,000 liters of water. It has 5

    supports beneath the bottom surface of the tank for the

    original configuration. The tank is made of alloy steel,

    which has yield strength of 250 MPa.

    The thickness of the sheet metal panel which build up

    the tank is 5 mm. Since the plates are too thin compared

    to their length, shell mesh type is preffered. For shell

    meshing, Autodesk Simulation Mechanical software

    employs Midplane mesh type. Midplane meshing is

    easy-to-use, which does not require any other geometry

    operation like extracting the mid-surface of the object

    to be meshed. Like solid meshing, midplane meshing

    also only needs the element size input from the user.

    The mesh is generated automatically.

    40 mm is assigned for the element size, which would allow mesh to be fine enough to cover the results.

    This results in total number of 55,928 nodes and 58,062 elements.

    The interior surfaces of the tank are loaded with hydrodynamic where the point on the surface of water

    is given as the reference point to pass the information of the height of the water in the tank.

    Figure 1: The bottom part of the water tank

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    3. Design Scenarios and ResultsFour design scenarios are studied to address the effect of bottom plate thickness and number of

    supports beneath the bottom surface of the tank on yielding. The critical section came out to be the

    bottom part of the tank, especially around the region where bottom surface and neighboring cylindrical

    surfaces meet. Two versions of support structure are tested: equally spaced 5 and 6 supports. Sheet

    metal thickness values tested are 5 mm and 7.5 mm. Table 1. shows maximum Von Mises stresses in the

    structure for 4 design variations.

    Von Mises Stress

    [MPa] 5 supports 6 supports

    5 mm thick. 1603.12 1547.5

    7.5 mm thick. 873.08 688.13Table 1: Maximum Von Mises Stress values for different design scenarios

    Figure 2: Von Mises Stress contours, scaled from 0 to 250 MPa, where 250 MPa is the yield strength

    of the material used. Stress values in red areas exceed or approach to the yield point. (a) 5 supports

    with 5 mm plate thickness, (b) 5 supports with 7.5 mm plate thickness, (c) 6 supports with 5 mm

    plate thickness, (d) 6 supports with 7.5 mm plate thickness.

    (a) (b)

    (c) (d)

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    From Figure 2, it can be deduced that increasing plate thickness and increasing number of supports

    results in lower stresses. It is also seen that plate thickness has more influence on the stress results than

    number of supports.

    Displacement contour plots for 5-support and 6-support tanks are given below.

    Figure 3: Displacement Contour Plot Patterns of 5-support and 6-support Design Scenarios

    Maximum displacement values are given in the table below for the four design scenarios:

    Maximum

    Displacement [mm] 5 supports 6 supports

    5 mm thick. 23.45 22.14

    7.5 mm thick. 14.04 10.92Table 2: Maximum displacement values of 4 different design scenarios

    4. ConclusionFrom the results given above, its found out that both increasing bottom plate thickness and the number

    of supports result in decreasing Von Mises stress.

    A further interpretation would state that increasing the bottom plate thickness has much stronger effect

    on stress than increasing the number of supports. A %50 percent increase in bottom plate thickness

    results in approximately halving the maximum stress and displacement.

    Mid-plane meshing is the appropriate meshing type for problems which deal with long and thin plateelements. Autodesk Simulation has an easy-to-use mid-plane mesher which allows this kind of studies to

    be completed with less effort and in a shorter time span.

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    Figure 4: Safety Factor of the bottom plate of the tank for the 6-support 7.5 mm bottom plate thickness design

    scenario. Red denotes critical areas with 0