Products: ABAQUS/Standard ABAQUS/Explicit
For coupled temperature-displacement analysis in ABAQUS/Standard the user can introduce a factor, , which defines the fraction of frictional work converted to heat. The fraction of generated heat into the first and second surface, and , respectively, can also be defined. This heat generation capability is to be used only in a coupled temperature-displacement analysis.
The heat fraction, , determines the fraction of the energy dissipated during frictional slip that enters the contacting bodies as heat. Heat is instantaneously conducted into each of the contacting bodies depending on the values of and . The contact interface is assumed to have no heat capacity and may have properties for the exchange of heat by conduction and radiation.
Refer to Small-sliding interaction between bodies, Section 5.1.1, and Finite-sliding interaction between deformable bodies, Section 5.1.2, for explanations of the notation used for the shape functions and contact parameters involved in the small-sliding and slide line theory. Note that the shape functions for interpolation of the temperature field may be different from the interpolation functions for the displacements; for example, if the underlying elements are of second order, the displacements are interpolated using quadratic functions, whereas the temperature field is interpolated using linear shape functions. Hence, the temperature interpolator will be denoted with the symbol and the displacement interpolation will be denoted with the symbol . Only the heat transfer terms will be discussed in the following.
The heat flux densities—, going out the surface on side 1, and , going out the surface on side 2—are given by
The heat flux density generated by the interface element due to frictional heat generation is given by
The heat flux due to conduction is assumed to be of the form
The heat flux due to radiation is assumed to be of the form
Using the Galerkin method the weak form of the equations can be written as
At a contact point the temperatures can be interpolated with
For contact pairs and slide line elements, each integration point is associated with a unique slave node. If we associate with the slave surface, then will again have only a single nonzero entry equal to one and the derivatives of with respect to vanish. In contrast, on the master surface there will be multiple nonzero entries in , which are a function of the position on the master surface at which contact occurs.
For GAPUNIT and DGAP elements each contact (integration point) is directly associated with a node pair. Hence, and each have one nonzero entry that is equal to one, and all terms involving derivatives of and with respect to vanish.
The variations of overclosure, , and slip, , can be written as linear functions of the variations of displacement. These expressions, which determine the form of the matrix for contact elements, have been derived in Small-sliding interaction between bodies, Section 5.1.1, and Finite-sliding interaction between deformable bodies, Section 5.1.2.