Steady-State Transport Analysis
It is cumbersome to model rolling and sliding contact, such as a tire rolling along a rigid surface or a disc rotating relative to a brake assembly, using a traditional Lagrangian formulation since the frame of reference in which motion is described is attached to the material. An observer in this reference frame views even steady-state rolling as a time-dependent process since each point undergoes a repeated history of deformation. Such an analysis is computationally expensive since a transient analysis must be performed and fine meshing is required along the entire surface of the cylinder.
The steady-state transport analysis capability in Abaqus/Standard uses a reference frame that is attached to the axle of the rotating cylinder. An observer in this frame sees the cylinder as points that are not moving, although the material of which the cylinder is made is moving through those points. This removes the explicit time dependence from the problem—the observer sees a fixed point anywhere, with material moving through it. Thus, the finite element mesh describing the cylinder in this frame of reference does not undergo the large rigid body spinning motion. This means that a fine mesh is required only near the contact zone.
This description can be viewed as a mixed Lagrangian/Eulerian method, where rigid body rotation is described in a spatial or Eulerian manner, and deformation, which is now measured relative to the rotating rigid body, is described in a material or Lagrangian manner. It is this kinematic description that converts the steady-state moving contact problem into a purely spatially dependent simulation.
The steady-state rolling and sliding analysis capability provides solutions that include frictional effects, inertia effects, and material convection for most rate-independent, rate-dependent, and history-dependent material models.
The theory is described in detail in Steady-state transport analysis.
Input File Usage
STEADY STATE TRANSPORT
Pass-by-Pass Analysis Technique
By default, the steady-state transport analysis procedure in Abaqus/Standard solves for a steady-state rolling and sliding solution directly as a series of increments, with iterations to obtain equilibrium within each increment. The solution in each increment is a steady-state solution corresponding to the loads acting on the structure at that instant. The steady-state transport analysis procedure also provides an alternative technique to obtain a quasi-steady-state rolling and sliding solution as a series of increments, with iterations to obtain equilibrium within each increment. However, the solution in each increment is usually not a steady-state solution corresponding to the loads acting on the structure at that instant. A steady-state solution is generally obtained in several increments, with each increment corresponding to a loading pass through the structure. Each loading pass through the structure can have a different magnitude.
The pass-by-pass analysis technique is relevant only when used with plasticity/creep models. It has no effect on a viscoelastic material model.
Input File Usage
STEADY STATE TRANSPORT, PASS BY PASS
Unstable Problems
Local instabilities (e.g., surface wrinkling, material instability, or local buckling), can occur in a steady-state transport analysis. Abaqus/Standard offers the option to stabilize this class of problems by applying damping throughout the model in such a way that the viscous forces introduced are sufficiently large to prevent instantaneous buckling or collapse but small enough not to affect the behavior significantly while the problem is stable. The available automatic stabilization schemes are described in detail in Automatic Stabilization of Unstable Problems.