Technical economic estimate of the ratio of cooling welding using models vs. MEF
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15381/idata.v18i1.12068Keywords:
technical and economic analysis, welding, coolingAbstract
The development of this research paper is focused on a comparison between the results obtained experimentally for the estimation of the rate of cooling water welded geometry T specimens made of structural steel ASTM HR A36 compared to analyzes using computational tools , particularly the software of the finite element modeling (FEM) ANSYS, the experimental test for type K thermocouples which capture the cooling temperature values obtained by the data acquisition cards are used, the analysis model required MEF the development of a more than 850,000 mesh nodes, the results of the comparative product analysis of the cooling rate, showing a difference between methods below 3%, which allows the computer to estimate as a reliable alternative when setting this type of analysis additionally the costs associated with the development of experimental tests vs MEF implementing models for the costs associated with this stage of experimentation are determined, it is established that the rate of recovery, just to test cooling is evaluated 15 months, but the versatility of this computational tool, allows you to explore other uses.Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2015 Alexander Pinilla, Laura Gallego Cossio, Ludivia Hernández Aros

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
AUTHORS RETAIN THEIR RIGHTS:
a. Authors retain their trade mark rights and patent, and also on any process or procedure described in the article.
b. Authors retain their right to share, copy, distribute, perform and publicly communicate their article (eg, to place their article in an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in the INDUSTRIAL DATA.
c. Authors retain theirs right to make a subsequent publication of their work, to use the article or any part thereof (eg a compilation of his papers, lecture notes, thesis, or a book), always indicating the source of publication (the originator of the work, journal, volume, number and date).