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CD-adapco

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CD-adapco
Company typePrivately Held
IndustryCAE software
FoundedMelville, NY (1980)
Defunct25 January 2016 Edit this on Wikidata
HeadquartersMelville, NY USA
ProductsSTAR-CCM+
STAR-CD
STAR-Design
OwnerPeter Steven MacDonald, President (deceased 2015)
Number of employees
~900 (2016) working at 34 different offices across the globe.
Websitewww.cd-adapco.com

CD-adapco (Computational Dynamics-Analysis & Design Application Company Ltd) is a multinational computer software company that authors and distributes applications used for computer-aided engineering, best known for its computational fluid dynamics (CFD) products.[1][2][3]

In their 2009 annual user conference, CD-adapco announced that the company had grown 22% in 2008, and they expected similar results in 2009.[1] Professional Engineering Magazine described this as "recession-proof performance" and went on to point out that this success is especially noteworthy considering that many of the company's customers are in the automotive industry, a sector of the economy that was, at the time, suffering record low sales levels.[1] During the financial downturn of 2009, CD-adapco launched their "No Engineer Left Behind" program, which provided free STAR-CCM+ licenses and training for displaced and unemployed engineers.[4] On April 2016, Siemens acquired CD-adapco for 970 million USD.

Products

A screenshot of a fluid-flow analysis being conducted in STAR-CCM+

STAR-CD

CD-adapco's legacy CFD package, STAR-CD, was praised by Renault automotive design engineers as a "world class design package". Nearly 75% of the points won during the 2005 Formula One season were awarded to drivers of cars that were designed with STAR-CD.[3]

STAR-CCM+

In 2004, CD-adapco opted to shift their attention from improving STAR-CD to completely rewriting their computational fluid dynamics (CFD) algorithms and tools. The company gambled that in the end, starting from a "blank slate" with a group of experts would produce a better result than continuing to work improvements into their old products[5] In early 2004, the company introduced this new product, STAR-CCM+, the "CCM" standing for "computational continuum mechanics".[6][7] The application employs a client-server architecture, to allow users to solve problems from a lightweight computer, such as a laptop, while the computationally expensive math is done on a remote machine. This substantially reduces the need for expensive desktop computers—a requirement of some other similar packages[8]

Even in periods of major economic downturn, few customers cut back on annual licenses.[1] CD-adapco has speculated that their product's success has been partially because their application was designed from the start to simultaneously solve fluid flow and heat transfer problems. Competing products often consist of separate solvers coupled together, which requires that both be kept in agreement; a time consuming complication that degrades accuracy.[1]

STAR-CAD

STAR-CAD is a range of PLM-embedded tools that allows engineers to perform CFD analysis from within their company's chosen CAD environment. STAR-CAD integrates with Catia, Pro/Engineer, SolidWorks and NX.[9]

Fuel Cells

In a partnership with the United States Department of Energy, CD-adapco developed an expert system to model and analyze solid oxide fuel cells[10]

Technology

A simple valve discretized into finite volume cells using CD-adapco's polyhedral mesher

Meshing of Computational Domain

The first "official release" of STAR-CCM+ included the world's first commercially available polyhedral meshing algorithm.[11] The use of a polyhedral mesh has proven to be more accurate for fluid-flow problems than a hexahedral or tetrahedral mesh of a similar size (number of cells),[12] but is considerably more difficult to create.[12]

Automatic Surface Repair

Included in STAR-CCM+ is a tool called a "surface wrapper", which "shrink wraps" a user's CAD geometry, filling any holes, overlaps or cracks.[13] The company says that this feature cuts geometry preparation time down from days to minutes.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Ben Sampson (April 29, 2009). "Growth Industry". Professional Engineering Magazine.
  2. ^ "Garuda, the car that runs 180km per litre!".
  3. ^ a b Total F1. "CD-Adapco helps Renault to success".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ DE Editors (March 6, 2009). "CD-adapco Launches No Engineer Left Behind Program for Displaced and Unemployed Engineers". Desktop Engineering. {{cite news}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  5. ^ "CD-adapco Group Releases STAR-CCM+". May 6, 2004.
  6. ^ Gould, Lawrence S. (October 1, 2004). "The trends in CFD are continuous, dynamic, and real". Automotive Design & Production. Retrieved October 1, 2009.
  7. ^ CFD Review. "STAR-CCM+ V2.08: Cranking Up the Heat". {{cite news}}: External link in |author= (help)
  8. ^ Larry Gould. "The Trends In CFD Are Continuous, Dynamic, And Real". Automotive Design and Production.
  9. ^ Simulation environments ease CFD analysis, Engineering Talk, July 9, 2007 {{citation}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  10. ^ AutomotiveWorld. "Simulation software for fuel cell development". Retrieved October 1, 2009.
  11. ^ "CD-adapco Releases STAR-CCM+ Box Set". CFD Review. October 18, 2005. {{cite news}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  12. ^ a b Franco Brezzi and Konstantin Lipnikov and Mikhail Shashkov, New Discretization Methodology for Diffusion Problems on Polyhedral Meshes (PDF)
  13. ^ a b "Products, April 2007". Desktop Engineering Magazine. April 2007. Retrieved October 15, 2009.
  14. ^ FEATool Multiphysics homepage