pirs
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 1, 2012
- 21
Hello!
I am trying to model a deformable steel beam which contacts with two rigid plates: one acting as a support and the other acting as a loading plate through applied displacement. I am using the *contact algorythm to perform a quasi-static analysis.
However, when observing the results, several sudden increases on the support reaction occur followed by quasi-horizontal platforms, either when applying the displacement with a linear increment or smooth step.
Analysis of the kinematic energy vs. total energy shows that there is quite some influence of the kinematic term, even though I am trying to perform a quasi-static analysis.
My question is: how does one avoid such sudden reaction increases, which appear to result from excess kinematic energy?
I have tried both using *bulk viscosity and *fixed mass scaling, but nothing seems to help, although the results might alter a little.
Attached is a graphic of the time/support reaction.
Thanks in advance to any input on this.
I am trying to model a deformable steel beam which contacts with two rigid plates: one acting as a support and the other acting as a loading plate through applied displacement. I am using the *contact algorythm to perform a quasi-static analysis.
However, when observing the results, several sudden increases on the support reaction occur followed by quasi-horizontal platforms, either when applying the displacement with a linear increment or smooth step.
Analysis of the kinematic energy vs. total energy shows that there is quite some influence of the kinematic term, even though I am trying to perform a quasi-static analysis.
My question is: how does one avoid such sudden reaction increases, which appear to result from excess kinematic energy?
I have tried both using *bulk viscosity and *fixed mass scaling, but nothing seems to help, although the results might alter a little.
Attached is a graphic of the time/support reaction.
Thanks in advance to any input on this.