Many legal professionals are exposed to Finite Element Analysis (FEA) in the courtroom. Having a fundamental understanding of how the method works can help an attorney (i) recognize when FEA can strengthen a case, (ii) choose a capable expert and (iii) develop meaningful challenges to the opposition's expert. As discussed in the last issue of Courtroom FEA, if a loss, injury or death is due to something bending or breaking, FEA can help identify the cause of failure and hence the responsible party. But how does it work?
Divide and conquer.
But first, let's back up and discuss what is being conquered. FEA is applied to many types of problems, such as temperatures in consumer electronics, airflow around aircraft, and magnetic fields in electric motors. By far the most common application is structural FEA -- determining how a solid body responds to various forces. The structural problem amounts to writing down some "governing equations" that describe the material and how it behaves, and then solving those equations for the physical part being analyzed subject to how it is held and loaded. This can be done on paper for some simple part shapes. The resulting "closed form solution" is another equation that provides the answer in terms of the basic variables, such as the part's dimensions.
But reality intervenes, and most parts are too complicated to solve in closed form. FEA comes to the rescue by providing a "numerical solution" for each individual problem. This is a large gathering of numbers approximating the desired answers, such as displacements and stresses, across the part. But each solution is unique to a specific case; there is no simple answer in equation form.
Now then, how does FEA divide and conquer the problem to provide the numerical solution? The answer lies in the name, "Finite Element Analysis".
"Analysis" is obvious: the part is being analyzed under certain conditions.
"Element" describes a small section of the part. In fact, the governing equations mentioned above can generally be derived by considering a small section, writing the equations for what's happening in that section, and then mathematically allowing the size of the section to become infinitesimal, or infinitely small. In FEA, each section is called an "element", and the elements are not made infinitely small.
"Finite", then, refers to the countable number of elements used to represent the structure. The elements are of finite, measurable size. A computer can handle the computations on this finite number of elements.
Each element acts on its neighboring elements. FEA assembles the equations from all the elements into one large matrix equation, and the computer is used to determine the numerical solution. A key concept of FEA is this: if the elements are made small enough and are spread advantageously across the part, the numerical solution can closely approximate reality.
An experienced analyst can prepare the finite element model such that it accurately predicts the part's behavior, and can ensure that the solution algorithms do not interject significant errors. Results from the less-experienced are often suspect, and identifying them as so can be a tremendous advantage in the courtroom.
- Related Articles
- Related Q&A
- Personal Injury Expert Lawyers Service
- Florida Personal Injury Accidents - Child Injury - Expert Advice
- Florida Personal Injury Accidents - Child Injury - Expert Advice
- Personal Injury Lawyers Should Be The First Number Called After An Accident
- Personal Injury Claims Expert
- Personal Injury Solicitors Uk
- Personal Injury Law
- Personal Injury Lawyer




*CONTRACT TO BUY A CONDOMINIUM UNIT - WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR
By: DAVID TAN | 28/12/2009Before you sign a condominium unit purchase contract, what contractual conditions should you look out for?
What does the Grand Jury do?
By: Kevin Jones | 28/12/2009Explanation as to what the grand jury does.
Probation for DUI Violation
By: Kevin Jones | 28/12/2009What happens when you get probation for a DUI driving Violation
DUI Probation Violation
By: Kevin Jones | 28/12/2009An explanation as to what a DUI probation violation is and what are the results from it.
What is the Criminal Justice System?
By: Kevin Jones | 28/12/2009An explanation as to what the criminal justice system is and how it works.
Information about the Criminal Justice System
By: Kevin Jones | 28/12/2009A descriptive look into the criminal justice system.
Assessing your legal rights in public places
By: Ronald Kresten | 28/12/2009If you trip or fall in your place of work, it can be easy to determine the party at fault for the incident. However, when you are in a public space it can often be difficult to work out who is liable should you suffer an accident.
Where Do You View Public Court Records In New Jersey To Access Someones Divorce Decree
By: James Nash | 28/12/2009If you want to find someone’s divorce decree, that shouldn’t be a problem because you can find and access court records on several different ways. In fact, you can access court records faster than ever on the internet.
Courtroom Fea: Why Did it Fail?
By: Steve Roensch | 16/04/2008 | Personal InjuryFinite element analysis can help explain why a product failed, which can often identify the responsible party.
Finite Element Analysis: Post-processing
By: Steve Roensch | 09/01/2006 | TechnologyThe following four-article series was published in a newsletter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). It serves as an introduction to the recent analysis discipline known as the finite element method.
Finite Element Analysis: Solution
By: Steve Roensch | 09/01/2006 | TechnologyThe following four-article series was published in a newsletter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). It serves as an introduction to the recent analysis discipline known as the finite element method.
Courtroom FEA: But my expert has hand calculations
By: Steve Roensch | 29/12/2005 | LawIt is very important that design engineers do hand calculations. It is very important that engineering expert witnesses do hand calculations. Hand calculations are good. But they aren't good enough in a high stakes courtroom battle.
Courtroom FEA: Does FEA apply to my case?
By: Steve Roensch | 29/12/2005 | LawMany attorneys hire metallurgists to study failures across many industries. Similarly, finite element analysis is regularly applied to a vast array of products. FEA applies when something bending or breaking is an issue.
Courtroom FEA: But how does FEA work?
By: Steve Roensch | 29/12/2005 | LawMany legal professionals are exposed to Finite Element Analysis (FEA) in the courtroom. But how does it work?
Courtroom FEA: FEA = Finite Element Analysis
By: Steve Roensch | 29/12/2005 | LawAs a product liability professional, it is important that you know what Finite Element Analysis (FEA) can do for you. If you don't, your adversary might. Whether you serve plaintiffs, defendants or both, you're probably already familiar with FEA.