Hello Sotiris Thomas
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Posted:
9 years ago
10 déc. 2015, 11:57 UTC−5
Hi Thomas
I am new in COMSOL and I also want to find Pull-in Voltage of a clamped beam.
Therefore, I am looking for Pull-in reference. However, I can not find any information about Pull-in in COMSOL User Guide 5.0. It seems that you understand it better since you know what is VdcSP and E_est. Can you give me any information?
Thank you very much
Best
Hi Thomas
I am new in COMSOL and I also want to find Pull-in Voltage of a clamped beam.
Therefore, I am looking for Pull-in reference. However, I can not find any information about Pull-in in COMSOL User Guide 5.0. It seems that you understand it better since you know what is VdcSP and E_est. Can you give me any information?
Thank you very much
Best
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Posted:
9 years ago
16 déc. 2015, 09:41 UTC−5
Hi Duy,
The way I figured out to do it is by running an Auxiliary sweep with the "continuation" option on the parameter of interest (in your case the pull-in voltage). Start by defining Vpi as something very llow (that you dont expect pull-in) and sweep it to higher values. When pull-in occurs, the stationary solver will not converge and the sweep will automatically backtrack to a smaller Vpi value in an effort to find a value that converges.
The smaller the step in the sweep the higher the accuracy the Vpi will be pinpointed to.
After this is finished, you can find your Vpi by looking at the log and see the last run that the solver managed to converge and give a solution. Hope that helps.
PS: E_est is a parameter relevant in my own design only :)
Hi Duy,
The way I figured out to do it is by running an Auxiliary sweep with the "continuation" option on the parameter of interest (in your case the pull-in voltage). Start by defining Vpi as something very llow (that you dont expect pull-in) and sweep it to higher values. When pull-in occurs, the stationary solver will not converge and the sweep will automatically backtrack to a smaller Vpi value in an effort to find a value that converges.
The smaller the step in the sweep the higher the accuracy the Vpi will be pinpointed to.
After this is finished, you can find your Vpi by looking at the log and see the last run that the solver managed to converge and give a solution. Hope that helps.
PS: E_est is a parameter relevant in my own design only :)
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Posted:
9 years ago
17 déc. 2015, 09:35 UTC−5
Hi Thomas
Thank you very much.
Best regards
Duc
Hi Thomas
Thank you very much.
Best regards
Duc