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Journal Article

A Procedure for Efficient Trimmed Body FE Simulations, Based on a Transfer Admittance Model of the Sound Package

2010-06-09
2010-01-1405
Porous materials are extensively used in the construction of automotive NVH parts. The sound package design during vehicle development requires simulation methods at vehicle level that can take into consideration the dynamical behavior of porous materials. This need has led to different numerical technologies based on Biot's equations. In particular, direct FE implementations of Biot's equations have been included into some commercial FE software programs. Such implementations, while giving good results, are time consuming and difficult to apply within the time constraints given by the timeline of vehicle development programs. This paper presents an alternative methodology, thanks to which it is possible to build the coupled vibro-acoustic model of a trimmed vehicle without modeling physically the trim components.
Technical Paper

The Use of Trim FE Simulations in Body NVH Design Optimization

2016-06-15
2016-01-1780
In automotive acoustics, body NVH design is traditionally carried out without considering the acoustic trim parts. Nevertheless, the vibro-acoustic interaction of body structure and insulation trim cannot be neglected in the middle frequency range, where structure borne propagation might still be dominating and where classical statistical approaches are generally not able to represent the influence of local changes in stiffness and damping. This, together with the market requirement of lightweight and more efficient sound package solutions, is leading the CAE engineers to evaluate new design approaches dedicated to vehicle components such as dash or floor systems, for which the multi-physics interaction between damping, body stiffness and trim impedance is important.
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