Browsers supply a great deal of view-related functionality by listing the parts of a model in a tabular and/or tree-based
format, and providing controls inside the table that allow you to alter the display of model parts.
A surface represents the geometry associated with a physical part. A surface is a two-dimensional geometric entity that
may be used in automatic mesh generation.
Use the Surfaces: Patch tool to create patch surfaces between free lines that are not connected or surface edges. You can also delete
surfaces with this tool.
Solids are closed volume of surfaces that can take any shape. Solids are three-dimensional entities that can be used in
automatic tetra and solid meshing.
A face is a single Non-uniform Rational B-Spline (NURBS) and is the smallest area entity. It has a separate underlying
mathematical definition, specified when it was created.
FE geometry is topology on top of mesh, meaning CAD and mesh exist as a single entity. The purpose of FE geometry
is to add vertices, edges, surfaces, and solids on FE models which have no CAD geometry.
Tools and workflows that are dedicated to rapidly creating new parts for specific use cases, or amending existing
parts. The current capabilities are focused on stiffening parts.
A surface represents the geometry associated with a physical part. A surface is a two-dimensional geometric entity that
may be used in automatic mesh generation.
Use the Surfaces: Patch tool to create patch surfaces between free lines that are not connected or surface edges. You can also delete
surfaces with this tool.
Use the Surfaces: Patch tool
to create patch surfaces between free lines that are not connected or surface edges. You can
also delete surfaces with this tool.
New surfaces are organized in the same component as the first line selected.
For FE geometry surfaces, the Patch tool
creates FE geometry surfaces with tessellated elements. For CAD geometry, normal
surfaces are created. If a patch is created between two different surfaces, then
based on CAD or FE geometry, the below result is expected. A patch between CAD and
FE geometry creates a CAD surface, while a patch between two FE geometry surfaces
creates an FE geometry surface.
For FE geometry only, an additional option “Suppress
common edges” is supported, as shown below.
From the Geometry ribbon, click the Surfaces > Patch tool.
To manually patch surfaces, do one of the following:
While left-clicking, drag an edge to another edge.
Hovering over a
target line displays a preview surface.
Select multiple edges around a missing surface, then click an edge that
has already been selected.
Select multiple edges or loops, then click Patch
All on the guide bar.
Double-click an edge loop.
Tip: After a patch surface has been manually created, it remains
selected. HyperWorks attempts to select the appropriate
tangency setting for the surface created, but you can change the tangency by
clicking on the surface while it is still selected.
To automatically highlight and patch missing surfaces:
Click Find on the guide bar.
Click and
to cycle
through found surfaces.
Select highlighted surfaces to fix them individually or click
Patch All on the guide bar.
To delete surfaces:
Select the surface(s) you want to delete.
Click the highlighted surface(s) again to delete them.
Note: Deleting surfaces is not supported for FE
geometry.
Tip: Copying and pasting solid faces generates surfaces and
organizes them in the same component.