Abstract

This study presents an overview of multiphysics software, whose implementation simulate physical phenomena in tandem to depict real-life behavior on a virtual prototype. In order to give engineers access to multiphysics packages, many vendors’ focus now is on speeding the applications and making them intuitive to use. Multiphysics software analysis is helping to reduce feedback noise in hearing aids made by Widex of Copenhagen, Denmark. Engineers at hearing aid maker Widex use Comsol multiphysics software to simulate vibrations within the ear, and thus to reduce hearing-aid noise and feedback. Meanwhile, engineers at steelmaker ArcelorMittal of Luxembourg City, Luxembourg, turned to multiphysics modeling to help them find the most corrosion-resistant steel possible. Developers of multiphysics software say they are addressing the reality that physical phenomena do not operate singly in nature. They believe that solving for multiple phenomena can make simulations more realistic. And they are designing software packages to be easier to use and more accessible, to put them into the hands of more engineers.

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