Facebook Subscribe to DE's News FeedFollow DE on TwitterContact DE
home – desktop engineering
Technology for Design Engineering
DE- Desktop Engineering – Technology for Design EngineeringCAD Design - PLM Lifecycle Management Tools - 3d Modeling by Desktop EngineeringDesign Analysis - Simulation Visualization Software - CAE, FEA, CFD by Desktop EngineeringHigh Performance Computing - Engineering Workstations Peripherals by Desktop EngineeringRP&M - Rapid Prototyping - Reverse Engineering - Fabrication by Desktop EngineeringSubscribe or Renew your Desktop Engineering SubscriptionAdvertise with Desktop Engineering

Check it Out: T-Rex Anisotropic Tetrahedral Meshing PDF

| Published March 17, 2010

Print

Dear Desktop Engineering Reader:

CFD mavens in aerospace, automotive, power generation, chemical processing, and similar industries look at Gridgen from Pointwise as a gold standard meshing toolkit vital to generating high-quality 3D grids. Gridgen generates a variety of meshes—structured hex, unstructured tet, and hybrid meshes—on your CAD data pretty much repair-free. You can export your mesh in the native formats of many CFD systems and other solvers. It does such a good job so efficiently that big name exhibitors like CD-adapco, CEI, Intelligent Light, and Tecplot will be at the Pointwise user group meeting next month.

Among the techniques in the Gridgen toolkit is an advanced feature called anisotropic tetrahedral meshing. Dubbed T-Rex by Pointwise, this is a technique for extruding regular layers of tetrahedra from boundaries. The mesh adjusts to convex and concave regions and colliding extrusion fronts, and T-Rex automatically handles things like concave corners without making you get in there and manually figure out what to do.

And that's the key to what T-Rex brings to your work: Through its automation and advanced algorithms, T-Rex can reduce your boundary layer mesh generation time from hours to minutes. And, because the mesh you end up with is so clean and so efficiently prepared for your solver, you get more accurate solutions and more rapid convergence from your CFD simulations.

Today's Check It Out download has more technical data about T-Rex and what automated boundary layer meshing for CFD could mean for you. A couple of cool images let you see what it can do for you. You'll also find a link under the download connection to some examples of where Gridgen is being used and how. Good stuff. Check it right away.

Thanks, Pal. — Lockwood

Anthony J. Lockwood
Editor at Large, Desktop Engineering

Check out the T-Rex Anisotropic Tetrahedral Meshing PDF

Relevant Links:
Latest MCAD/CAM News
Related Articles

Top Ten Articles

DE Digital Magazine
Read DE's Digital Edition



HOME | MCAD/CAM | ANALYSIS/SIMULATION | COMPUTERS/PERIPHERALS | RAPID TECHNOLOGIES | ABOUT US
PRIVACY POLICY | SITE MAP

© 2012, Desktop Engineering, Design Engineering Technology News Magazine