vladanea said:
Dear Mech_Engineer, you mean that with ANSYS I can't create something to look like a tooth and with ANSYS to apply one or more forces on it?
"Dentistry is the known evaluation, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of diseases, disorders and conditions of the oral cavity, maxillofacial area and the adjacent and associated structures and their impact on the human body."
With this definition of dentistry in mind, ANSYS is pretty much useless in the general practice of dentistry; however, it is commonly used in the fields of biomechanics and biomedical engineering (which I get the feeling is more what you're after). To answer your question, ANSYS is of course able to take a solid model of a tooth for example and apply forces to it and calculate stresses (assuming you have accurate models of the tooth's constituent components). Making a structural model of a tooth is possibly less straightforward than you might think, but it is possible.
Creating a solid model of a tooth in ANSYS would be a difficult thing to do I suspect, mainly because it's solid modeling capabilities are somwhat limited. however if you were able to make a model of a tooth in another program more well-suited to the task (or possibly import a 3-d scan of an actual tooth, ANSYS could certainly import the model and do a structural analysis of it.
vladanea said:
And if I have to , I would say that I am not experienced with this software and I'd like to learn more about how can I create different shapes (2D and 3D) (which to look like a tooth!), how can I make such a shape to look realistic and so on. I hope you understand me this time and I hope you can advise me now:)
Well, ANSYS makes a somewhat simplistic CAD software solution called DesignModeler which can be used to make simple CAD models; but its features are somewhat limited and it doesn't have the advance surface spline manipulation tools that a package like SolidWorks has. So, I would say that your best bet is either to find a 3-D scan of a tooth you can import into ANSYS, of find a CAD package that has more powerful geometry tools that can be used to manually model a tooth.
Another problem with modeling the tooth, would be how your constrain it and apply material properties to it... You couldn't really use a fixed condition at the root because the tooth is rooted in soft tissue and bone. Additionally, you would have to decide how you wanted to model the biting force on the top of the tooth, either with a pressure over an area or a point load. The material properties of the tooth would be difficult because the tooth has a hollow fleshy center and a hard outer layer of enamel. How this was modeled, and what the material properties of those parts are would play a significant role in your model.