ProductsAbaqus/StandardAbaqus/ExplicitAbaqus/CAEAbaqus/Aqua TypeHistory data
LevelStep Abaqus/CAELoad module
Applying distributed loads
Required parameter for cyclic symmetry models in steady-state dynamics
analyses
- CYCLIC MODE
-
Set this parameter equal to the cyclic symmetry mode number of loads that
are applied in the current steady-state dynamics procedure.
Optional parameters
- AMPLITUDE
-
Set this parameter equal to the name of the amplitude curve that defines the
variation of the load magnitude during the step.
If this parameter is omitted for uniform load types in an
Abaqus/Standard
analysis, the reference magnitude is applied immediately at the beginning of
the step or linearly over the step, depending on the value assigned to the AMPLITUDE parameter on the
STEP option (see
Defining an analysis).
If this parameter is omitted in an
Abaqus/Explicit
analysis, the reference magnitude is applied immediately at the beginning of
the step.
Amplitude references are ignored for nonuniform loads given by user
subroutine
DLOAD in an
Abaqus/Standard
analysis. Amplitude references are passed into user subroutine
VDLOAD in an
Abaqus/Explicit
analysis.
Only the load magnitude is changed with time. Quantities such as the
direction of an applied gravity load and the fluid surface level in hydrostatic
pressure loading are not changed.
- CONSTANT RESULTANT
-
Set CONSTANT RESULTANT=NO (default) if surface traction vectors, edge traction vectors,
or edge moments are to be integrated over the surface in the current
configuration.
Set CONSTANT RESULTANT=YES if surface traction vectors, edge traction vectors, or edge
moments are to be integrated over the surface in the reference configuration.
The CONSTANT RESULTANT parameter is valid only for uniform and nonuniform surface
tractions and edge loads (including edge moments); it is ignored for all other
load types.
- FOLLOWER
-
Set FOLLOWER=YES (default) if a prescribed traction or shell-edge load is to
rotate with the surface or shell edge in a large-displacement analysis (live
load).
Set FOLLOWER=NO if a prescribed traction or edge load is to remain fixed in a
large-displacement analysis (dead load).
The FOLLOWER parameter is valid only for traction and edge load labels TRVECn, TRVEC, TRVECnNU, TRVECNU, EDLDn, and EDLDnNU. It is ignored for all other load labels.
- OP
-
Set OP=MOD (default) for existing
DLOADs to remain, with this option modifying existing
distributed loads or defining additional distributed loads.
Set OP=NEW if all existing
DLOADs applied to the model should be removed. New distributed
loads can be defined.
- ORIENTATION
-
Set this parameter equal to the name given for the
ORIENTATION option (Orientations)
used to specify the local coordinates in which components of traction or
shell-edge loads are specified.
The ORIENTATION parameter is valid only for traction and edge load labels TRSHRn, TRSHR, TRSHRnNU, TRSHRNU, TRVECn, TRVEC, TRVECnNU, TRVECNU, EDLDn, and EDLDnNU. It is ignored for all other load labels.
- REF NODE
-
This parameter applies only to
Abaqus/Explicit
analyses and is relevant only for viscous and stagnation body force and
pressure loads when the velocity at the reference node is used.
Set this parameter equal to either the node number of the reference node or
the name of a node set containing the reference node. If the name of a node set
is chosen, the node set must contain exactly one node. If this parameter is
omitted, the reference velocity is assumed to be zero.
- REGION TYPE
-
This parameter applies only to
Abaqus/Explicit
analyses.
This parameter is relevant only for pressure loads applied to the boundary
of an adaptive mesh domain. If a distributed pressure load is applied to a
surface in the interior of an adaptive mesh domain, the nodes on the surface
will move with the material in all directions (they will be nonadaptive).
Abaqus/Explicit
will create a boundary region automatically on the surface subjected to the
defined pressure load.
Set REGION TYPE=LAGRANGIAN (default) to apply the pressure to a Lagrangian boundary
region. The edge of a Lagrangian boundary region will follow the material while
allowing adaptive meshing along the edge and within the interior of the region.
Set REGION TYPE=SLIDING to apply the pressure load to a sliding boundary region. The
edge of a sliding boundary region will slide over the material. Adaptive
meshing will occur along the edge and in the interior of the region. Mesh
constraints are typically applied on the edge of a sliding boundary region to
fix it spatially.
Set REGION TYPE=EULERIAN to apply the pressure to an Eulerian boundary region. This
option is used to create a boundary region across which material can flow. Mesh
constraints must be used normal to an Eulerian boundary region to allow
material to flow through the region. If no mesh constraints are applied, an
Eulerian boundary region will behave in the same way as a sliding boundary
region.
Data lines to define
all distributed loads except those special cases described
below- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label (see
About the element library).
-
Reference load magnitude, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option. For nonuniform loads the magnitude must be defined
in user subroutine
DLOAD for
Abaqus/Standard
and
VDLOAD for
Abaqus/Explicit.
If given, this value will be passed into the user subroutine in an
Abaqus/Standard
analysis.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define distributed loads for different elements or
element
sets.
Data lines to define
mechanical pore pressure loads (Abaqus/Standard
only)- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label PORMECHn.
-
Scaling factor.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define mechanical pore pressure loading for different
elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
a general surface traction vector, a surface shear traction vector, or a
general shell-edge traction vector
- First line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label TRVECn, TRVEC, TRSHRn, TRSHR, EDLDn, TRVECnNU, TRVECNU, TRSHRnNU, TRSHRNU, or EDLDnNU.
-
Reference load magnitude, which can be modified by using the
AMPLITUDE option.
-
1-component of the traction vector direction.
-
2-component of the traction vector direction.
-
3-component of the traction vector direction.
For a two-dimensional or axisymmetric analysis, only the first two
components of the traction vector direction need to be specified. For the shear
traction load labels TRSHRn, TRSHR, TRSHRnNU, or TRSHRNU, the loading direction is computed by projecting the specified
traction vector direction down upon the surface in the reference configuration.
For nonuniform loads in
Abaqus/Standard
the magnitude and traction vector direction must be defined in user subroutine
UTRACLOAD. If given, the magnitude and vector will be passed into
the user subroutine in an
Abaqus/Standard
analysis.
Repeat this data line as often as necessary to define
traction vectors for different elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
a surface normal traction vector, a shell-edge traction vector (in the normal,
transverse, or tangent direction), or a shell-edge moment
- First line
-
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type EDMOMn, EDNORn, EDSHRn, EDTRAn, EDMOMnNU, EDNORnNU, EDSHRnNU, or EDTRAnNU.
-
Reference load magnitude, which can be modified by using the
AMPLITUDE option. For nonuniform loads in
Abaqus/Standard
the magnitude must be defined in user subroutine
UTRACLOAD. If given, the magnitude will be passed into the user
subroutine in an
Abaqus/Standard
analysis.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define traction vectors for different elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
centrifugal loads and Coriolis forces (Abaqus/Standard
only)- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label CENTRIF, CENT, or CORIO.
-
Actual magnitude of the load, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option.
-
Coordinate 1 of a point on the axis of rotation.
-
Coordinate 2 of a point on the axis of rotation.
-
Coordinate 3 of a point on the axis of rotation.
-
1-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotation.
-
2-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotation.
-
3-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotation.
For axisymmetric elements the axis of rotation must be the global
y-axis, which must be specified as 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0,
1.0, 0.0.
Repeat this data line as often as necessary to define
centrifugal or Coriolis forces for different elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
rotary acceleration loads (Abaqus/Standard
only)- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label ROTA.
-
Actual magnitude of the load, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option.
-
Coordinate 1 of a point on the axis of rotary acceleration.
-
Coordinate 2 of a point on the axis of rotary acceleration.
-
Coordinate 3 of a point on the axis of rotary acceleration.
-
1-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotary acceleration.
-
2-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotary acceleration.
-
3-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotary acceleration.
For two-dimensional elements the axis of rotation direction must be the
global z-axis (out of the plane of the model), which must
be specified as 0.0, 0.0, 1.0.
Repeat this data line as often as necessary to define
rotary acceleration loading for different elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
rotordynamic loads (Abaqus/Standard
only)- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label ROTDYNF.
-
Actual magnitude of the load, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option.
-
Coordinate 1 of a point on the axis of rotation.
-
Coordinate 2 of a point on the axis of rotation.
-
Coordinate 3 of a point on the axis of rotation.
-
1-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotation.
-
2-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotation.
-
3-component of the direction cosine of the axis of rotation.
Rotordynamic loads are supported only for three-dimensional continuum and
cylindrical elements, shell elements, membrane elements, beam elements, and
rotary inertia elements. The spinning axis defined as part of the load must be
the axis of symmetry for the structure. Therefore, beam elements must be
aligned with the symmetry axis. In addition, one of the principal directions of
each loaded rotary inertia element must be aligned with the symmetry axis, and
the inertia components of the rotary inertia elements must be symmetric about
this axis.
Repeat this data line as often as necessary to define
rotordynamic loads for different elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
gravity loading- First
line
-
The element number or element set label is optional for gravity loads. If
this field is left blank in an
Abaqus/Standard
or
Abaqus/Explicit
analysis, all elements in the model that have mass contributions (including
point mass elements) are automatically included in an element set called
_Whole_Model_Gravity_Elset and the gravity
load is applied to all elements in this element set.
-
Distributed load type label GRAV.
-
Actual magnitude of the load, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option.
-
1-component of the gravity vector.
-
2-component of the gravity vector.
-
3-component of the gravity vector.
For axisymmetric elements the gravity load must be in the
z-direction; therefore, only component 2 should be
nonzero.
Repeat this data line as often as necessary to define
gravity loading for different elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
external and internal pressure in pipe or elbow elements
- First line
-
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label PE, PI, PENU, or PINU.
-
Actual magnitude of the load, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option. For nonuniform loads the magnitude must be defined
in user subroutine
DLOAD.
-
Effective inner or outer diameter.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define internal or external pressure loading for
different pipe or elbow elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
hydrostatic pressure (Abaqus/Standard
only)- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label HPn or HP.
-
Actual magnitude of the load, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option.
-
Z-coordinate of zero pressure level in
three-dimensional or axisymmetric cases; Y-coordinate of
zero pressure level in two-dimensional cases.
-
Z-coordinate of the point at which the pressure is
defined in three-dimensional or axisymmetric cases;
Y-coordinate of the point at which the pressure is defined
in two-dimensional cases.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define hydrostatic pressure loading for different
elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
external and internal hydrostatic pressure in pipe or elbow
elements- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label HPE (external) or HPI (internal).
-
Actual magnitude of the load, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option.
-
Z-coordinate of zero pressure level in
three-dimensional or axisymmetric cases; Y-coordinate of
zero pressure level in two-dimensional cases.
-
Z-coordinate of the point at which the pressure is
defined in three-dimensional or axisymmetric cases;
Y-coordinate of the point at which the pressure is defined
in two-dimensional cases.
-
Effective inner or outer diameter.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define internal or external pressure loading for
different pipe or elbow elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
viscous body force, stagnation pressure, or stagnation body loads (Abaqus/Explicit
only)- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label VBF, SPn, SP, or SBF.
-
Reference load magnitude, which can be modified by the use of the
AMPLITUDE option.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define viscous body force, stagnation pressure, or
stagnation body loads for different elements or element
sets.
Loads used by
Abaqus/Aqua
Optional parameters
- AMPLITUDE
-
Set this parameter equal to the name of the amplitude curve that defines the
variation of the load magnitude during the step. If this parameter is omitted
for uniform load types, the reference magnitude is applied immediately at the
beginning of the step or linearly over the step, depending on the value
assigned to the AMPLITUDE parameter on the
STEP option (see
Defining an analysis).
Amplitude references are ignored for nonuniform loads given by user subroutine
DLOAD.
Only the load magnitude is changed with time. Quantities such as the fluid
surface level in hydrostatic pressure loading are not changed.
- OP
-
Set OP=MOD (default) for existing
DLOADs to remain, with this option modifying existing loads or
defining additional loads.
Set OP=NEW if all existing
DLOADs applied to the model should be removed. New distributed
loads can be defined.
Data lines to define
distributed buoyancy forces
- First line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label PB.
-
Magnitude factor, M (default value is 1.0). This factor
will be scaled by any
AMPLITUDE specification associated with this
DLOAD option.
-
Effective outer diameter of the beam, truss, or one-dimensional rigid
element (not used for rigid surface elements R3D3 and R3D4).
- The following data must be provided only when
it is necessary to model the fluid inside an element:
-
Density of fluid inside the element.
-
Effective inner diameter of the element.
-
Free surface elevation of the fluid inside the element.
- The following data should be provided only if
it is necessary to change the fluid properties provided on the
AQUA option, as described in
Buoyancy loads.
Gravity waves do not affect the buoyancy loading when any external fluid
property is overridden.
-
Density of the fluid outside the element.
-
Free surface elevation of the fluid outside the element.
-
Constant pressure, added to the hydrostatic pressure outside the element.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define buoyancy loading for various elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
distributed transverse fluid or wind drag
- First line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label FDD (fluid) or WDD (wind).
-
Magnitude factor, M (default value is 1.0). This factor
will be scaled by any
AMPLITUDE specification associated with this
DLOAD option.
-
Effective outer diameter of the member, D.
-
Drag coefficient, .
-
Structural velocity factor, .
The default value is 1.0 if this entry is left blank or set equal to 0.0.
-
For load type FDD, name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling steady current velocities
().
For load type WDD, name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling the local
x-direction wind velocity ().
If this entry is blank, the velocities are not scaled
(
or ).
-
For load type FDD, name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling wave velocities
().
For load type WDD, name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling the local
y-direction wind velocity ().
If this is blank, the velocities are not scaled (
or ).
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define distributed transverse fluid or wind drag on
various elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
distributed tangential fluid drag
- First line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label FDT.
-
Magnitude factor, M (default value is 1.0). This factor
will be scaled by any
AMPLITUDE specification associated with this
DLOAD option.
-
Effective outer diameter of the member, D.
-
Drag coefficient, .
-
Structural velocity factor, .
The default value is 1.0 if this entry is left blank or set equal to 0.0.
-
Exponent h. The default value is 2.0 if this entry is
left blank or set equal to 0.0.
-
Name of the
AMPLITUDE curve ()
used for scaling steady current velocities. If this entry is blank, the current
velocities are not scaled ().
-
Name of the
AMPLITUDE curve ()
used for scaling wave velocities. If this entry is blank, the wave velocities
are not scaled ().
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define distributed tangential fluid drag on various
elements or element
sets.
Data lines to define
distributed fluid inertia loading
- First line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label FI.
-
Magnitude factor, M (default value is 1.0). This factor
will be scaled by any
AMPLITUDE specification associated with this
DLOAD option.
-
Effective outer diameter of the member, D.
-
Transverse fluid inertia coefficient, .
-
Transverse added-mass coefficient, .
-
Name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling fluid particle accelerations
().
If this entry is blank, the fluid particle accelerations are not scaled
().
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define fluid inertia loading for various elements or
element
sets.
Data lines to define
concentrated fluid and wind drag loading on the ends of
elements- First
line
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label FD1, FD2, WD1, or WD2.
-
Magnitude factor, M (default value is 1.0). This factor
will be scaled by any AMPLITUDE specification associated with this
DLOAD option.
-
Exposed area, .
-
Drag coefficient, C.
-
Structural velocity factor, .
The default value is 1.0 if this entry is left blank or set equal to 0.0.
-
For load types FD1 or FD2, name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling steady current velocities
().
For load types WD1 or WD2, name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling the local
x-direction wind velocity ().
If this entry is blank, the velocities are not scaled
(
or ).
-
For load types FD1 or FD2, name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling wave velocities
().
For load types WD1 or WD2, name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling the local
y-direction wind velocity ().
If this entry is blank, the velocities are not scaled
(
or ).
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define concentrated fluid or wind drag loading on the
ends of
elements.
Data lines to define
concentrated fluid inertia loading on the ends of elements
- First line
-
-
Element number or element set label.
-
Distributed load type label FI1 or FI2.
-
Magnitude factor, M (default value is 1.0). This factor
will be scaled by any AMPLITUDE specification associated with this
DLOAD option.
-
Fluid inertia coefficient, .
-
Fluid acceleration shape factor, .
-
Added-mass coefficient, .
-
Structural acceleration shape factor, .
-
Name of the
AMPLITUDE curve used for scaling fluid particle accelerations. If
this entry is blank, the fluid particle accelerations are not scaled.
Repeat this data line as
often as necessary to define concentrated fluid inertia loading on the ends of
elements.
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