Predicting the real-world performance of a product requires simulation tools that span a variety of engineering disciplines. STAR-CCM+ is an all-in-one solution that delivers accurate and efficient multidisciplinary technologies in a single integrated user interface.
Why STAR-CCM+?
Don't just simulate, innovate!
In order to design better products, engineers need to predict the
consequence of any design changes on the real-world performance of
their product, for better or for worse. Historically those
predictions came from hand calculations or from the experimental
testing of physical prototypes. Today, engineering simulation
offers comprehensive predictions that are usually more accurate and
always less expensive than experimental testing. Deployed
effectively, these can be used to improve a design through multiple
iterations. Ultimately this results in higher quality and more
robust products that better fulfill customer expectations. Unlike
other methods, engineering simulation also offers the benefit of
exploring the performance of a product over the full range of
operating conditions that it is likely to face in its working life,
rather than just at a handful of carefully chosen “design points.”
However, not all engineering simulation tools are created equal. In
order to provide a constant stream of relevant engineering data,
simulation software must be:
- Multidisciplinary
Solving complex industrial problems requires simulation tools that
span a multitude of physical phenomena and a variety of
engineering disciplines. Real-world engineering problems do not
separate themselves into convenient categories such as
“aerodynamics”, “hydrodynamics”, “heat transfer” and “solid
mechanics”. Only multidisciplinary engineering simulation can
accurately capture all of the relevant physics that influence the
real-world performance of a product, and can be used to
automatically drive the virtual product through a range of design
configurations and operating scenarios. By minimizing the level of
approximation, engineers can be confident that the predicted
behavior of their design will match the real-world performance of
their product.
- Timely
No matter how “realistic” your simulation is, the data it provides
is useless if it does not influence the final design of your
product. For simulation to be a useful tool in the
engineering design process, predictions must be delivered on time,
every time. A late simulation result is not much better than no
result at all. Ideally, simulation should generate a constant
stream of data that guides and informs the design process through
every decision. This is only possible when the simulation process
is a robust and automated one. Once an engineer has invested in the
creation of a multidisciplinary simulation model, that model should
be easily redeployable to investigate a full range of design
configurations and operating scenarios, with little or no manual
effort from the engineer.
- Affordable
Used effectively, engineering simulation consistently delivers a
high return on investment (ROI). It provides far more in terms of
reduced development costs and increased product revenue than it
costs to implement. However, traditional engineering simulation
licensing schemes can make the transition from an experimentalist’s
mindset of “testing just a few design points” to “investigating the
whole design space” prohibitively expensive. This is because most
engineering simulation software vendors base their licensing model
around the broken paradigm of “the more you use, the more you
lose,” charging you per core instead of per simulation and tying
customers to an almost linear relationship between the cost of
their license and the maximum number of cores that they are allowed
to utilize in their simulations. Innovative licensing schemes such
as Power Sessions (giving you unlimited cores for a fixed price),
Power-on-Demand (enabling you to run on the cloud) and Power Tokens
(giving you unprecedented flexibility and facilitating design
exploration) render the cost of using engineering simulation
affordable.
- Backed by experts
An uncomfortable truth about modern engineering is that there
really are no easy problems left to solve. In order to meet the
demands of industry, it is no longer good enough to do ‘a bit of
CFD’ or ‘some stress analysis’. In order to design truly
innovative products, engineers are often “pushing back the
boundaries of the possible”. This is something that is difficult to
achieve in isolation, and often requires competences outside
an individual engineer’s immediate area of expertise. In order to
be successful, an engineer should have ready access to a community
of simulation experts, and ideally an established relationship with
a dedicated support engineer who not only understands the
engineer’s problems, but can approach the right expert help
whenever needed.