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Simcenter wheels

What’s new in the Simcenter Fluids & Thermal solution domain

Simcenter Fluids and Thermal solutions are serving engineers from CAD designers to Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) analysts, from aerodynamicists to…

Simcenter FLOEFD 2022.1 & 2021.3: CAD embedded CFD enhancements

Review the enhancements in Simcenter FLOEFD CAD-Embedded CFD in version 2022.1 and 2021.3 software releases

vehicle digital twin

Vehicle NVH integration: how to combine test and simulation

Learn how to leverage Vehicle NVH Prediction to support electric drive integration using an hybrid approach involving test and simulation data.

Illustration of power generation

Electromagnetic motors are the world’s biggest energy consumers

It’s an energy conversion problem. Energy conversion has been a common human practice since the first human hit two rocks…

Addivive Manufacturing Build-plate

Prevent excessive build plate distortion in additive manufacturing

One of the unexpected effects observed after 3D printing is the excessive build plate distortion. This distortion only becomes visible…

Group of Siemens customers posing in front of photo wall at Simcenter Femap Symposium

How to sign up for Simcenter Femap Symposium in 2022

Grow your CAE software knowledge alongside industry peers at Simcenter Femap Symposium, returning in-person to select locations in 2022.

How to create and optimize the design of your external gear pump

Dive into the pump modeling world and find out how the Simcenter Amesim helps you create and optimize the design…

The Carbon Cost of Everything

Embedded Emissions: The Carbon Cost of EveryTHING.

Manufacturing anything involves taking random combinations of atoms (usually manifested as a raw material) and processing them into a useful product. This takes huge amounts of energy, and causes lots of emissions.

Heating And Global Warming: Are We Burning Down The House?

Heating is the most significant carbon-emitting activity in buildings. Accounting for the coal, oil and gas used directly and indirectly via electricity generation for heating, 65% of all heating equipment produces greenhouse gases in some form. While the trend over the past decade is moving in the right direction, the damage has been done.