I am starting to put rebar into my sometimes large concrete models. I tried entering the rebar as round truss elements, but the nodes did not seem to merge. Also larger networks of these truss elements were hard to build because the truss elements seemed to want to be manually placed some of the time rather than snapping to existing nodes. I manually mesh in Mecway as these models are very regular and suited to Hex 8 or Hex 20. Also difficulty with the node snapping into a different plane. Will there be a difficulty, if I get it it correctly assembled, running in CCX, will the conversion to solid elements mess up or increase the size of the mesh a lot? Will the long length to width ration of such elements cause a difficulty? Would there be a problem with square rebar connected to remaining materials by only one corner? There should be very little bending in these elements, but yielding behavior and concrete compression only behavior is needed.
For possible future inclusion, could the truss elements be also included in expanded solid element option form for easier switching back and forth between the internal solver and CCX?
Comments
If you were merging the nodes with Mesh tools -> Merge nearby nodes, it only acts on selected nodes (every member of the merge has to be selected) or the whole model if nothing is selected, so it could be that. I'm not sure why snapping to existing nodes didn't work. If you could give more details, it might turn out there's a bug. It does snap to whatever plane the nearest node (in screen space) is in which means if you have multiple nodes at the same screen location, it picks an arbitrary plane. Not great, sorry, but you could rotate the view slightly to separate them.
Expansion of beams to solids doesn't usually create too many nodes - just 4-6x per truss element and generally works fine connected to solids.
I have not tried extruding into the solid, I have been working at refining my mesh to put matching holes for the rebars, I have seen a Mechway example for this a few years back. The mesh refinement needed generated about 10 times as many nodes.
Merge nearby nodes doesn't consider the materials. I wonder if you could give more details on when it doesn't work so I can reproduce it?
The numbers of nodes/etc. reported by CCX are called "estimated upper bounds" and it really means it. Those numbers are usually much higher than what actually ends up in the system matrix and the solution.