-
For contact pairs
Abaqus/Standard
typically uses a pure master-slave relationship for the contact constraints by
default (see
About contact pairs in Abaqus/Standard);
the nodes of the slave surface are constrained not to penetrate into the master
surface. The nodes of the master surface can, in principle, penetrate into the
slave surface.
Abaqus/Explicit
includes this formulation but typically uses a balanced master-slave weighting
by default (see
Contact formulations for contact pairs in Abaqus/Explicit).
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The contact formulations in
Abaqus/Standard
and
Abaqus/Explicit
differ in many respects. For example,
Abaqus/Standard
provides a surface-to-surface formulation, while
Abaqus/Explicit
provides an edge-to-edge formulation.
-
The constraint enforcement methods in
Abaqus/Standard
and
Abaqus/Explicit
differ in some respects. For example, both
Abaqus/Standard
and
Abaqus/Explicit
provide penalty constraint methods, but the default penalty stiffnesses differ.
-
Abaqus/Standard
and
Abaqus/Explicit
both provide a small-sliding contact formulation (see
Contact formulations in Abaqus/Standard
and
Contact formulations for contact pairs in Abaqus/Explicit).
However, the small-sliding contact formulation in
Abaqus/Standard
transfers the load to the master nodes according to the current position of the
slave node.
Abaqus/Explicit
always transfers the load through the anchor point.
As a result of these differences, contact definitions specified in an
Abaqus/Standard
analysis cannot be imported into an
Abaqus/Explicit
analysis and vice versa (see
Transferring results between Abaqus/Explicit and Abaqus/Standard).