15.4 Understanding interaction properties

You can define a set of data that is referred to by an interaction but is independent of the interaction; for example, the coefficients that define friction during contact. This set of data is called an interaction property. One interaction property can be referred to by many different interactions.

You can create the following types of interaction properties:

Contact

A contact interaction property can define tangential behavior (friction and elastic slip) and normal behavior (hard, soft, or damped contact and separation). In addition, a contact property can contain information about damping, thermal conductance, thermal radiation, and heat generation due to friction. A contact interaction property can be referred to by a general contact, surface-to-surface contact, or self-contact interaction. For detailed instructions on defining this type of interaction property, see Defining a contact interaction property, Section 15.13.1.

Film condition

A film condition interaction property defines a film coefficient as a function of temperature and field variables. A film condition interaction property can be referred to only by a film condition interaction. For detailed instructions on defining this type of interaction property, see Defining a film condition interaction property, Section 15.13.2.

Acoustic impedance

An acoustic impedance interaction property defines surface impedance or the proportionality factors between the pressure and the normal components of surface displacement and velocity in an acoustic analysis. An acoustic impedance interaction property can be referred to only by an acoustic impedance interaction. For detailed instructions on defining this type of interaction property, see Defining an acoustic impedance interaction property, Section 15.13.3.

Incident wave

An incident wave interaction property defines the speed of the incident wave and other characteristics of the wave loading. An incident wave interaction property can be referred to only by an incident wave interaction. For detailed instructions on defining this type of interaction property, see Defining an incident wave interaction property, Section 15.13.4.

Actuator/sensor

An actuator/sensor interaction property provides the PROPS, JPROPS, NPROPS, and NJPROPS variables that are passed into a UEL user subroutine used with an actuator/sensor interaction. For detailed instructions on defining this type of interaction property, see Defining an actuator/sensor interaction property, Section 15.13.5.