Good Day. I want to know if there's a feature in Fusion 360 simulation to give a coating to the material other than its physical materials? i want to simulate a component with steel as a material and chromium as its coating
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Solved by John_Holtz. Go to Solution.
This is probably more of a design forum question, @seth.madore . Does it really matter? I wouldn't think that a material with a few molecules thick coating would behave any differently than the bulk material.
thank you. Yes, actually it matters. some coating like black oxide improve the corrosion resistance and fatigue life of a steel. Im planning to investigate this phenomenon using fusion 360
Hi @garryson09 . I agree with @johnswetz1982 . The answer is no.
I doubt that you are simulating the corrosion in Fusion, so the coating does not add any value to the simulation for corrosion. You are not simulating fatigue in Fusion, so the coating does not add any value for that. You might perform a static stress analysis and then use the stress results to do a hand calculation for the fatigue life, but the stress is not affected by the coating. The coating affects the life because it changes the endurance limit. That is part of the hand calculation; it is not related to the simulation.
Thank you so much sir for the reply, actually i'm about to do the coat using a physical solid with very thin dimension. But i think the meshing will not work because its super thin. Also, can you elaborate the portion where the coating will take effect in a spider web dimension? is there other way?
Hi @garryson09
What I was trying to say is the coating will not affect the results of the stress analysis unless the thickness of the part is on the same order as the thickness of the coating. In other words, if the real part is the size of a spider web and you add a coating to it, then the coating will affect the stress analysis. If the real part is approximately 1 mm thick or thicker, then the coating will have no affect on the stress analysis.
You should perform the stress analysis on the part without the coating. Neither the thickness of the coating nor the material properties of the coating will have any effect on the stress analysis. The reason is there is nothing in the analysis that is a function of the surface finish, at least not to the molecular level that is involved. Any effects that are caused by the coating need to be included in the hand calculations that you do, using the stress results as the input to the hand calculations.
Try the analysis without the coating and let us know what you get.
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