are those in which an electric potential gradient causes straining,
while stress causes an electric potential gradient in the material;
are solved using an eigenfrequency extraction, modal dynamic, static,
dynamic, or steady-state dynamic procedure;
require the use of piezoelectric elements and piezoelectric material
properties;
can be performed for continuum problems in one, two, and three
dimensions; and
can be used in both linear and nonlinear analysis (however, in
nonlinear analysis the piezoelectric part of the constitutive behavior is
assumed to be linear).
The electrical response of a piezoelectric material is assumed to be made up
of piezoelectric and dielectric effects:
where
is the electrical potential,
is the component of the electric flux vector (also known as the electric
displacement) in the ith material direction,
is the piezoelectric stress coupling,
is a small-strain component,
is the material's dielectric matrix for a fully constrained material, and
is the negative of the gradient of the electrical potential along the
ith material direction, .
Defining piezoelectric and dielectric properties is discussed in
Piezoelectric Behavior.
The theoretical basis of the piezoelectric analysis capability in
Abaqus
is defined in
Piezoelectric analysis.
Procedures Available for Piezoelectric Analysis
Piezoelectric analysis can be carried out with the following procedures:
Initial conditions of piezoelectric quantities cannot be specified. See
Initial Conditions
for a description of the initial conditions that can be applied in static or
dynamic procedures.
Boundary Conditions
The electric potential at a node (degree of freedom 9) can be prescribed using a boundary
condition (see Boundary Conditions). Displacement
and rotation degrees of freedom can also be prescribed by using boundary conditions as
described in the relevant static and dynamic analysis procedure sections.
Boundary conditions can be prescribed as functions of time by referring to amplitude curves (see
Amplitude Curves).
In an eigenfrequency extraction step (Natural Frequency Extraction) involving
piezoelectric elements, the electric potential degree of freedom must be constrained at
least at one node to remove singularities from the dielectric part of the element operator.
If there are multiple disconnected piezoelectric regions in the model, the electric
potential degree of freedom must be constrained at least at one node in each of these
regions.
Loads
Both mechanical and electrical loads can be applied in a piezoelectric
analysis.
Applying Mechanical Loads
The following types of mechanical loads can be prescribed in a piezoelectric
analysis:
Concentrated nodal forces can be applied to the displacement degrees of
freedom (1–6); see
Concentrated Loads.
Distributed pressure forces or body forces can be applied; see
Distributed Loads.
Applying Electrical Loads
The following types of electrical loads can be prescribed, as described in
Electromagnetic Loads:
Concentrated electric charge.
Distributed surface electric charge and body electric charge.
Loading in Mode-Based and Subspace-Based Procedures
Electrical charge loads should be used only in conjunction with residual
modes in the eigenvalue extraction step, due to the “massless” mode effect.
Since the electrical potential degrees of freedom do not have any associated
mass, these degrees of freedom are essentially eliminated (similar to Guyan
reduction or mass condensation) during the eigenvalue extraction. The residual
modes represent the static response corresponding to the electrical charge
loads, which will adequately represent the potential degree of freedom in the
eigenspace.
Predefined Fields
The following predefined fields can be specified in a piezoelectric
analysis, as described in
Predefined Fields:
Although temperature is not a degree of freedom in piezoelectric
elements, nodal temperatures can be specified. The specified temperature
affects only temperature-dependent material properties, if any.
The values of user-defined field variables can be specified. These
values affect only field-variable-dependent material properties, if any.
Material Options
The piezoelectric coupling matrix and the dielectric matrix are specified as
part of the material definition for piezoelectric materials, as described in
Piezoelectric Behavior.
They are relevant only when the material definition is used with coupled
piezoelectric elements.
The mechanical behavior of the material can include linear elasticity only
(Linear Elastic Behavior).
Each material definition can have a material damping coefficient assigned
for procedures where damping can be part of the solution. For piezoelectric
materials you can specify piezoelectric damping. You can define stiffness
proportional viscous and structural damping by providing damping coefficients
for the displacement (mechanical), piezoelectric coupling, and dielectric parts
of the damping operator. If you specify piezoelectric damping to define
stiffness proportional viscous damping, you cannot specify material damping to
define stiffness proportional viscous damping, and vice versa. The same applies
for stiffness proportional structural damping.
Elements
Piezoelectric elements must be used in a piezoelectric analysis (see
Choosing the Appropriate Element for an Analysis Type).
The electric potential, ,
is degree of freedom 9 at each node of these elements. In addition, regular
stress/displacement elements can be used in parts of the model where
piezoelectric effects do not need to be considered.
Output
The following output variables are applicable to the electrical solution in
a piezoelectric analysis:
Element integration point variables:
EENER
Electrostatic energy density.
EPG
Magnitude and components of the negative of the electrical potential
gradient vector, .
EPGM
Magnitude of the electrical potential gradient vector.
EPGn
Component n of the negative of the electrical
potential gradient vector (n=1, 2, 3).
EFLX
Magnitude and components of the electrical flux (displacement) vector,
.
EFLXM
Magnitude of the electrical flux (displacement) vector.
EFLXn
Component n of the electrical flux (displacement)
vector (n=1, 2, 3).
Whole element
variables:
CHRGS
Values of distributed electrical charges.
ELCTE
Total electrostatic energy in the element, .
Nodal
variables:
EPOT
Electrical potential degree of freedom at a node.
RCHG
Reactive electrical nodal charge (conjugate to prescribed electrical
potential).
CECHG
Concentrated electrical nodal charge.
Limitations
Abaqus does not account for piezoelectric effects in the total energy balance equation, which
can lead to an apparent imbalance of the total energy of the model in some situations. For
example, if a piezoelectric truss is fixed at one end point and subjected to a potential
difference between its two end points, it deforms due to the piezoelectric effect.
Subsequently if the truss is held fixed in this deformed configuration and the potential
difference removed, strain energy is generated due to the constraints. This results in an
equivalent increase in the total energy of the model.
Input File Template
HEADING
…
MATERIAL, NAME=matlELASTICData lines to define linear elasticityPIEZOELECTRICData lines to define piezoelectric behaviorPIEZOELECTRIC DAMPING, BETAData lines to define piezoelectric dampingDAMPING, ALPHA=
DIELECTRICData lines to define dielectric behavior
…
AMPLITUDE, NAME=nameData lines to define amplitude curve for defining concentrated electric charge
**
STEP, (optionally NLGEOM)
STATIC
** or DYNAMIC, FREQUENCY, MODAL DYNAMIC,
** STEADY STATE DYNAMICS (, DIRECT or , SUBSPACE PROJECTION)
BOUNDARYData lines to define boundary conditions on electrical potential and
displacement (rotation) degrees of freedomCECHARGE, AMPLITUDE=nameData lines to define time-dependent concentrated electric chargesDECHARGE and/or DSECHARGEData lines to define distributed electric chargesCLOAD and/or DLOAD and/or DSLOADData lines to define mechanical loadingEND STEP