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Dive into the research topics where Declan Nolan is active.

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Featured researches published by Declan Nolan.


Engineering With Computers | 2014

Automatic dimensional reduction and meshing of stiffened thin-wall structures

Declan Nolan; Christopher M. Tierney; Cecil Armstrong; Trevor T. Robinson; Jonathan E. Makem

The creation of idealised, dimensionally reduced meshes for preliminary design and optimisation remains a time-consuming, manual task. A dimensionally reduced model is ideal for assessing design changes through modification of element properties without the need to create a new geometry or mesh. In this paper, a novel approach for automating the creation of mixed dimensional meshes is presented. The input to the process is a solid model which has been decomposed into a non-manifold assembly of smaller volumes with different meshing significance. Associativity between the original solid model and the dimensionally reduced equivalent is maintained. The approach is validated by means of a free-free modal analysis on an output mesh of a gas turbine engine component of industrial complexity. Extensions and enhancements to this work are also discussed.


Computer-aided Design and Applications | 2014

Managing Equivalent Representations of Design and Analysis Models

Christopher M. Tierney; Declan Nolan; Trevor T. Robinson; Cecil Armstrong

There is a requirement for better integration between design and analysis tools, which is difficult due to their different objectives, separate data representations and workflows. Currently, substantial effort is required to produce a suitable analysis model from design geometry. Robust links are required between these different representations to enable analysis attributes to be transferred between different design and analysis packages for models at various levels of fidelity.This paper describes a novel approach for integrating design and analysis models by identifying and managing the relationships between the different representations. Three key technologies, Cellular Modeling, Virtual Topology and Equivalencing, have been employed to achieve effective simulation model management. These technologies and their implementation are discussed in detail. Prototype automated tools are introduced demonstrating how multiple simulation models can be linked and maintained to facilitate seamless integration thro...


Engineering With Computers | 2015

Using mesh-geometry relationships to transfer analysis models between CAE tools

Christopher M. Tierney; Declan Nolan; Trevor T. Robinson; Cecil Armstrong

AbstractIntegrating analysis and design models is a complex task due to differences between the models and the architectures of the toolsets used to create them. This complexity is increased with the use of many different tools for specific tasks during an analysis process. In this work various design and analysis models are linked throughout the design lifecycle, allowing them to be moved between packages in a way not currently available. Three technologies named Cellular Modeling, Virtual Topology and Equivalencing are combined to demonstrate how different finite element meshes generated on abstract analysis geometries can be linked to their original geometry. Cellular models allow interfaces between adjacent cells to be extracted and exploited to transfer analysis attributes such as mesh associativity or boundary conditions between equivalent model representations. Virtual Topology descriptions used for geometry clean-up operations are explicitly stored so they can be reused by downstream applications. Establishing the equivalence relationships between models enables analysts to utilize multiple packages for specialist tasks without worrying about compatibility issues or substantial rework.


Computer-aided Design and Applications | 2016

Interface Management for Automating Finite Element Analysis Workflows

Christopher M. Tierney; Declan Nolan; Trevor T. Robinson; Cecil Armstrong

ABSTRACTThis paper outlines the importance of robust interface management for facilitating finite element analysis workflows. Topological equivalences between analysis model representations are identified and maintained in an editable and accessible manner. The model and its interfaces are automatically represented using an analysis-specific cellular decomposition of the 3D design space. Rework of boundary conditions following changes to the design geometry or the analysis idealization can be minimized by tracking interface dependencies. Utilizing this information with the Simulation Intent specified by an analyst, automated decisions can be made to process the interface information required to rebuild analysis models. Through this work automated boundary condition application is realized within multi-component, multi-resolution and multi-fidelity analysis workflows.


NAFEMS European Conference: Simulation Process and Data Management (SDM) | 2011

Defining Simulation Intent

Declan Nolan; Christopher M. Tierney; Trevor T. Robinson; Cecil Armstrong


Archive | 2018

Using a single project to integrate learning across years and disciplinary areas

Geoff Cunningham; Charles McCartan; Declan Nolan


NAFEMS UK Conference 2018 | 2018

Simulation Education; Recognising Evolving Industry Requirements and Individual Needs when Dealing with Large Class Sizes

Declan Nolan; Trevor T. Robinson; Gary Menary; Marco Geron; Mukul Shukla; Cecil Armstrong


European Congress on Computational Methods in Applied Sciences and Engineering: ECCOMAS | 2018

Decomposition and hex meshing of quasi-axisymmetric models

Christopher M. Tierney; Flavien Boussuge; Trevor T. Robinson; Declan Nolan; Cecil Armstrong


Computer-aided Design and Applications | 2018

Efficient Symmetry-Based Decomposition for Meshing Quasi-Axisymmetric Assemblies

Christopher M. Tierney; Flavien Boussuge; Trevor T. Robinson; Declan Nolan; Cecil Armstrong; Alexander Sansom


Computer-aided Design and Applications | 2018

Automatic Hexahedral-Dominant Meshing for Decomposed Geometries of Complex Components

Benoit Lecallard; Christopher M. Tierney; Trevor T. Robinson; Cecil Armstrong; Liang Sun; Declan Nolan; Alexander Sansom

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Cecil Armstrong

Queen's University Belfast

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Liang Sun

Queen's University Belfast

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Charles McCartan

Queen's University Belfast

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Gary Menary

Queen's University Belfast

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Geoff Cunningham

Queen's University Belfast

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Marco Geron

University of Limerick

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