Computer-aided Engineering

Assembly Line

How Cloud-Native CAE Simulation Boosts Growth & Savings

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✍️ Author: Samir Jaber

đź”– Topics: Computer-aided Engineering, Simulation

🏢 Organizations: SimScale, Illinois Tool Works, Samco, Withings, Rimac, Kichler, Johnson Screens, Axens


From CFD analyses of aerodynamics, turbomachinery, and urban microclimates to FEA simulations of structural mechanics in automotive and consumer products, all the way to thermal analyses for indoor environments and electronics cooling, the applications for engineering simulation are numerous and can involve multiple physics. In this article, we dive into cloud simulation and CAE and find out how it strategically impacts business growth and helps optimize financial resources, enabling sustainable growth and profitability while minimizing risks. We explore in numbers how various companies from different industries have benefited from SimScale’s cloud-native simulation platform and how you can, too.

One example is ITW, a global design and engineering firm and a leading global supplier of auto parts. Using SimScale, ITW engineers conducted nonlinear static simulation and analysis to accelerate the development of plastic automotive fastening components, allowing them to minimize the insertion force of their fasteners by up to 85% while saving 10% of their R&D costs.

Read more at SimScale Blog

AI and AM: A Powerful Synergy

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✍️ Author: Robin Tuluie

đź”– Topics: Additive Manufacturing, Computer-aided Engineering, Generative AI


There’s an urgent opportunity, right now, to fully exploit the tools of computer-aided engineering (CFD, FEA, electromagnetic simulation and more) using the capabilities of AI. Yes, we’re talking about design optimization—but it’s optimization like never before, automated with machine learning, at a speed and level of precision far beyond what can be accomplished by most manufacturers today.

AI accomplishes this feat by solving the CFD or FEA equations in a non-traditional way: machine learning examines, and then emulates, the overall physical behavior of a design, not every single math problem that underlies that behavior.

Read more at Design and Development Today