jball1
Mechanical
- Nov 4, 2014
- 71
I have a model that includes several bolted joints. In this model, I have modeled the fasteners with connector elements which have the three translational stiffnesses defined (two shear, one axial).
This is a transient analysis. I am predicting failure in a minority of the bolts in two of the connections (~20% of one connection and ~10% of another). I have never done this before, but I would like to include in my simulation failure of the connectors when the fasteners reach a particular von Mises stress, so that I can see how the force gets redistributed after fasteners fail (does the whole connection fail, or can it handle the failure of a few bolts?).
I have never done this before, and so I am reading the documentation. It seems like including connector failure based upon a simple force or moment limit is straightforward. It also seems like coupling the load in two or more direction is possible. However, I’ll be honest, I am not understanding all of the menus, and the documentation seems lacking to me (or maybe I’m just too dense!).
It seems like I have to use Behavior = Damage, not Behavior = Failure if I want to include coupling. Then I need to add “Initiation Potential”, and then “Specify Derived Component”, but then this is where it doesn’t seem like it is going to work. I need to be able to do the square root of the sum of the squares to calculate the overall shear force, and then I need to calculate the von Mises stress. It doesn’t seem like I can do one operation inside of another like that.
Anyways… if anyone has done this before, or has any thoughts on whether or not this is even feasible, please let me know. From sitting thru Simulia trainings, I was aware that connector failure was a capability that Abaqus has, and that it can account for fairly complex behavior (e.g. plasticity). I would have thought a von Mises failure criterion would be fairly easy to account for, but maybe not?
This is a transient analysis. I am predicting failure in a minority of the bolts in two of the connections (~20% of one connection and ~10% of another). I have never done this before, but I would like to include in my simulation failure of the connectors when the fasteners reach a particular von Mises stress, so that I can see how the force gets redistributed after fasteners fail (does the whole connection fail, or can it handle the failure of a few bolts?).
I have never done this before, and so I am reading the documentation. It seems like including connector failure based upon a simple force or moment limit is straightforward. It also seems like coupling the load in two or more direction is possible. However, I’ll be honest, I am not understanding all of the menus, and the documentation seems lacking to me (or maybe I’m just too dense!).
It seems like I have to use Behavior = Damage, not Behavior = Failure if I want to include coupling. Then I need to add “Initiation Potential”, and then “Specify Derived Component”, but then this is where it doesn’t seem like it is going to work. I need to be able to do the square root of the sum of the squares to calculate the overall shear force, and then I need to calculate the von Mises stress. It doesn’t seem like I can do one operation inside of another like that.
Anyways… if anyone has done this before, or has any thoughts on whether or not this is even feasible, please let me know. From sitting thru Simulia trainings, I was aware that connector failure was a capability that Abaqus has, and that it can account for fairly complex behavior (e.g. plasticity). I would have thought a von Mises failure criterion would be fairly easy to account for, but maybe not?