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The rigid surface is always the master surface in a contact interaction.
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The rigid surface should be large enough to ensure that slave nodes do
not slide off and “fall behind” the surface. If this happens, the solution
usually will fail to converge. Extending the rigid surface or including corners
along the perimeter (see
Figure 1)
will prevent slave nodes from falling behind the master surface.
Figure 1. Extending rigid surfaces to prevent convergence problems.
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The deformable mesh must be refined enough to interact with any feature
on the rigid surface. There is no point in having a 10 mm wide feature on the
rigid surface if the deformable elements that will contact it are 20 mm across:
the rigid feature will just penetrate into the deformable surface as shown in
Figure 2.
Figure 2. Modeling small features on the rigid surface.
With a sufficiently refined mesh on the deformable surface,
Abaqus/Standard
will prevent the rigid surface from penetrating the slave surface.
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The contact algorithm in
Abaqus/Standard
requires the master surface of a contact interaction to be smooth. Rigid
surfaces are always the master surface and so should always be smoothed.
Abaqus/Standard
does not smooth discrete rigid surfaces. The level of refinement controls the
smoothness of a discrete rigid surface. Analytical rigid surfaces can be
smoothed by defining a fillet radius that is used to smooth any sharp corners
in the rigid surface definition (see
Figure 3.)
Figure 3. Smoothing an analytical rigid surface.
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The rigid surface normal must always point toward the deformable surface
with which it will interact. If it does not,
Abaqus/Standard
will detect severe overclosures at all of the nodes on the deformable surface;
the simulation will probably terminate due to convergence difficulties.
The normals for an analytical rigid surface are defined as the
directions obtained by the 90° counterclockwise rotation of the vectors from
the beginning to the end of each line and circular segment forming the surface
(see
Figure 4).
Figure 4. Normals for an analytical rigid surface.
The normals for a rigid surface created from rigid elements are defined
by the faces specified when creating the surface.