carolina000
Bioengineer
- Sep 28, 2009
- 19
Dear all,
I have a strange situation here with Abaqus. Hope someone has an answer for this puzzle.
Just imagine you have a very soft rubber ball, in your hand palm down, hanging under gravity. And you want to model how the ball would deform if you turned your hand upside down, palm up. You have the initial geometry of the ball hanging under gravity.
My guess is, as i dont rotate the ball during the analysis, i need a first step, with a gravity load of -g (to reach the reference state of the undeformed ball) and a second step with a gravity load of -g (to model how the ball spreads in my turned hand). I cannot implement a unique step of -2g because the material is non-linear and the deformations are large.
Funny, when i do this in Abaqus, the first step is fine, but the deformations during the second step are 0! Maybe during the first step the ball reaches equilibrium, the point is the deformations during the second step are 0, so not real, right?
Now, If i import the results of the first step (ball in reference state) and apply a -g step, things are fine, that is, the deformations are roughly twice the deformations of the first step. But, why on earth doesnt this work with 2 steps in Abaqus??? In fact, how do i make it work without importing the deformed part???
Looking forward to your feedback!
C.
I have a strange situation here with Abaqus. Hope someone has an answer for this puzzle.
Just imagine you have a very soft rubber ball, in your hand palm down, hanging under gravity. And you want to model how the ball would deform if you turned your hand upside down, palm up. You have the initial geometry of the ball hanging under gravity.
My guess is, as i dont rotate the ball during the analysis, i need a first step, with a gravity load of -g (to reach the reference state of the undeformed ball) and a second step with a gravity load of -g (to model how the ball spreads in my turned hand). I cannot implement a unique step of -2g because the material is non-linear and the deformations are large.
Funny, when i do this in Abaqus, the first step is fine, but the deformations during the second step are 0! Maybe during the first step the ball reaches equilibrium, the point is the deformations during the second step are 0, so not real, right?
Now, If i import the results of the first step (ball in reference state) and apply a -g step, things are fine, that is, the deformations are roughly twice the deformations of the first step. But, why on earth doesnt this work with 2 steps in Abaqus??? In fact, how do i make it work without importing the deformed part???
Looking forward to your feedback!
C.