Contacts Modeling in Ansys
Contacts Modeling in Ansys
Contacts Modeling in Ansys
Lecture 3
Introduction to Contact
ANSYS Mechanical
Structural Nonlinearities
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Chapter Overview
Basic concept
p of contact
Contact Formulations
Stiffness and Penetration
Workshop
p 3A
Pinball Region
Symmetric vs. Asymmetric
Postprocessing
p
g Contact Results
Workshop 3B
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A. Basic Concepts
Contact:
When two separate surfaces touch each other such that they become
mutually
y tangent,
g
they
y are said to be in contact.
In the common physical sense, surfaces that are in contact have
these characteristics:
They do not interpenetrate.
They can transmit compressive normal forces and tangential friction
forces.
They
y often do not transmit tensile normal forces.
They are therefore free to separate and move away from each other.
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Contact
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B. Contact Formulations
Fn
xp
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Contact Status
Open
Penetration
Gap
Open
Penetration
Closed
Closed
Gap
Penetration
Penalty-Based Method
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MPC Formulation
SHELL Element
SOLID element
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Nodal Detection
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Tangential Behavior
Ftangential
= ktangential
xslidingg
g
g
where xsliding ideally is zero for sticking, although some slip is allowed in
the penalty-based method.
Unlike the Normal Contact Stiffness, the Tangential Contact Stiffness
cannot directly be changed by the user.
A more detailed discussion of Frictional contact will be presented with a
workshop in next Chapter.
Chapter
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Formulation
Normal
Normal
Tangential Stiffness
Tangential
Stiffness
Type
Augmented Lagrange
Pure Penalty
MPC
Normal Lagrange
Augmented Lagrange
Penalty
MPC
Lagrange Multiplier
Penalty
Penalty
MPC
Penalty
Yes 1
Yes 1
Yes 1
Yes
Yes
-
Any
Any
Bonded,No Separation
Any
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Comparison of Formulations
The table below summarizes some pros (+) and cons (-) with different
contact formulations:
Pure Penalty
Augmented Lagrange
Good convergence
May require additional
+ behavior (few
- equilibrium iterations if
equilibrium iterations)
penetration is too large
Sensitive to selection of
Less sensitive to
- normal contact stiffness
selection of normal
contact stiffness
Contact penetration is
Contact penetration is
- present and
present but controlled to
some degree
uncontrolled
Useful for any type of
Useful for any type of
+
+
contact behavior
contact behavior
Either Iterative or Direct
Either Iterative or Direct
+
+
Solvers can be used
Solvers can be used
Symmetric or
Symmetric or
+ asymmetric contact
+ asymmetric contact
available
available
Contact detection at
Contact detection at
+
+
integration points
integration points
Normal Lagrange
May require additional
- equilibrium iterations if
chattering is present
No normal contact
+ stiffness is required
MPC
Good convergence
+ behavior (few
equilibrium iterations)
No normal contact
+ stiffness is required
Usually, penetration is
+ near-zero
Contact detection at
nodes
Contact detection at
nodes
No penetration
Note that some topics, such as symmetric contact or contact detection, will be discussed
shortly
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Although Pure Penalty is the default in WorkbenchMechanical, Augmented Lagrange is recommended for
general frictionless or frictional contact in large-deformation
problems.
bl
Augmented Lagrange formulation adds additional controls to
automatically reduce penetration
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Fcontact
Iteration
te at o n
Iteration
te at o n+1
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Normal Stiffness
Augmented Lagrage
g
Lagrage
g g
Augmented
Augmented Lagrage
Augmented Lagrage
Normal Lagrange
0.01
0.1
1
10
-
Max Deform
2.84E-03
2.80E-03
2.80E-03
2.80E-03
2.80E-03
26.102
25.802
25.679
25.765
25.768
0.979
1.228
1.568
1.599
1.535
36%
20%
2%
4%
0%
2
2
3
4
2
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E. Pinball Region
Pinball radius
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Pinball Region
There are three options for controlling the size of the Pinball
Region for each contact detection point.
Program Controlled - (default) The pinball region
will be calculated by the program based on
underlying element type and size.
Auto Detection Value - The pinball region will be
equal to the Tolerance Value as set on the Global
Contact Settings.
Ensures that contact pairs created through the
automatic contact detection have a Pinball Radius
that envelops gap between target and contact.
Recommended option for cases where the automatic
contact detection region is larger than the program
pinball value. In such cases,, some
controlled p
contact pairs that were detected automatically may
not be initially closed at start of solution.
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Pinball Region
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F. Symmetric/Asymmetric Behavior
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Symmetric/Asymmetric Behavior
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Symmetric/Asymmetric Behavior
Contact Surface
Target Surface
C t tS
Contact
Surface
f
T
Target
t Surface
S f
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Symmetric/Asymmetric Behavior
Contact Surface
The target can penetrate
the contact surface
surface.
Target Surface
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Symmetric/Asymmetric Behavior
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Symmetric/Asymmetric
It is always good for the user to follow the general rules of thumb in
selecting Contact and Target surfaces noted on the previous slide for
any situation below where Asymmetric Behavior is used
used.
Specified Option
Behavior
Symmetric Behavior
Internally Asymmetric Behavior
Auto-Asymmetric Behavior
Used
Review ing Symmetric Behavior
Asymmetric Behavior
Results
Auto-Asymmetric Behavior
Notes
Symmetric Behavior
Asymmetric Behavior
Auto-Asymmetric Behavior
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Pure Penalty
Augmented Lagrange Normal Lagrange
Auto-Asymmetric
Symmetric
Symmetric
Asymmetric
Asymmetric
Asymmetric
Auto-Asymmetric
Auto-Asymmetric
Auto-Asymmetric
Results on Both
Results on Both
Results on Either
Results on Contact
Results on Contact
Results on Contact
Results on Either
Results on Either
Results on Either
Easier to set up
Easier to set up
Let program designate
Efficiency and control Efficiency and control
User has control
Let program designate Let program designate Let program designate
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MPC
Auto-Asymmetric
Asymmetric
Auto-Asymmetric
Results on Either
Results on Contact
Results on Either
Let program designate
User has control
Let program designate
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Symmetric/Asymmetric
Symmetric Behavior:
Easier to set up (Default in Workbench-Mechanical)
More computationally expensive.
Interpreting data such as actual contact pressure can be more difficult
Results are reported on both sets of surfaces
Asymmetric Behavior:
Workbench-Mechanical can automatically perform this designation (AutoAsymmetric) or
User can designate the appropriate surface(s) for contact and target
manually .
Selection of inappropriate Contact vs.Target may affect results.
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G. Contact results
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Contact Surface
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Target Surface
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Contact Surface
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Target Surface
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Lecture 4
Advanced Contact
ANSYS Mechanical
Structural Nonlinearities
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Chapter Overview
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- Target
Target Normal
Normal, Uncouple U to ROT
ROT produces expected results
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By highlighting Connections
branch in the Project tree for auto
detection upon model refreshing.
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Although the default settings are sufficient for most contact problems,
these additional controls broaden the range of capabilities
Tolerance Type, Tolerance Value, and
Tolerance Slider: Bodies in an assembly that
were created in a CAD system may not have
been placed precisely, resulting in small
overlaps or gaps along the contact regions
between bodies. You can account for any
imprecision by specifying contact detection
t l
tolerance
(applicable
(
li bl to
t automatic
t
ti contact
t t
detection only).
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Existing
gap
b t
between
CAD parts
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Priority: For very large models the number of contact regions can
sometimes become overwhelming and redundant, especially when
multiple types of contact are allowed.
209 parts
450 symmetric contact pairs
1.15million DOFs
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Priority (contd)
Face Overrides gives Face/Face contact precedence over both
Face/Edge and Edge/Edge contact. Face Overrides also gives
Face/Edge contact precedence over Edge/Edge contact.
In general, when Face Overrides priority is set with Face/Edge and
Edge/Edge contact, no Edge/Edge contact pairs will be detected.
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C. Interface Treatment
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Interface Treatment
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Interface Treatment
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Interface Treatment
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Interface Treatment
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D. Contact Tool
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All result columns when the contact pair is inactive (row is gray, or
Inactive appears under the Status column).
The Geometric Gap column for Frictionless, Rough, or Frictional contact
Types and an Interface Treatment set to Add Offset.
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St t = Cl
Status
Closed
d
Step 2
St t = Cl
Status
Closed
d
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Status = Open
Open-near
near field
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S b t 1
Substep
Substep 2
Contact
missed due
to coarse
time step
Substep 3
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Time step is
auto decreased
to capture the
contact status
change
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Ftangential
Fnormal
g
where is the coefficient of static friction
Once the tangential force Ftangential exceeds the above value, sliding will
occur
Fn
Ft
Fn
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