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  1. In ANSYS, you need to specify E and I separately. You can pick them independently as long as you get the desired EI. You specify I by specifying the cross-section as we saw in the preceding tutorial. You can pick E=2e11 (default) and calculate the equivalent square cross-section. 
  2. Model the geometry using four lines. You will need to have vertices where you will be applying forces, moments or displacement constraints. You can sketch four lines using Draw > Polyline. Right-click and select Open End to end the polyline. 
  3. Apply a distributed load using Line Pressure (see snapshot further down this page). In version 17, you can select all four lines when applying the line pressure.  But in version 16 and prior versions, when you apply the line pressure, you can select only one line at a time. Since there are four lines in total, you'll need to apply line pressure four times. 
  4. Apply the simply supported constraints using Supports > Displacement. For example, the settings in the figure below can be used to apply the simply supported constraint at A or C. As we saw in the tutorial, ANSYS uses a generalized 3D beam formulation which includes z displacements. Since we don't have any displacement in the z direction, you can set the z displacement to zero. You really need to do this at two vertices only. This will prevent the beam from translating in the z-direction and rotating about the y-axis. Otherwise, the problem becomes ill-posed, the stiffness matrix cannot be inverted and ANSYS will report a vague "solver pivot error". 

  5. You also need to add a constraint at one vertex to prevent rotation about the x axis as discussed in the truss tutorial in our free online ANSYS course at edx.org. This can be done by selecting Supports > Fixed Rotation as shown below.


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