You can create a displacement/rotation boundary condition to constrain the movement of the selected degrees of freedom to zero or to prescribe the displacement or rotation for each selected degree of freedom.
To create or edit a displacement/rotation boundary condition:
Display the displacement/rotation boundary condition editor using one of the following methods:
To create a new displacement/rotation boundary condition, follow the procedure outlined in Creating boundary conditions, Section 16.8.2 (Category: Mechanical; Types for Selected Step: Displacement/Rotation).
To edit an existing displacement/rotation boundary condition using menus or managers, see Editing step-dependent objects, Section 3.4.12. To edit the region to which the boundary condition is applied, see Editing the region to which a prescribed condition is applied, Section 16.8.4.
If you are creating the boundary condition in a buckling step, select the Use BC for option that specifies the calculations for which you want the boundary condition used. For more information, see Boundary conditions, in Eigenvalue buckling prediction, Section 6.2.3 of the ABAQUS Analysis User's Manual.
If you want to change the coordinate system (CSYS) in which to apply the boundary condition, click Edit and use one of the following methods:
Select an existing datum coordinate system in the viewport.
Select an existing datum coordinate system by name.
From the prompt area, click Datum CSYS List to display a list of datum coordinate systems.
Select a name from the list, and click OK.
Click Use Global CSYS from the prompt area to revert to the global coordinate system.
If a Method field appears toward the top of the editor, click the arrow to the right of the field, and select one of the following:
Select Specify Constraints if you want to specify values for particular degrees of freedom.
Select Fixed at Current Position if you want to fix the degrees of freedom at their final values from the previous general step.
If a Distribution field appears in the editor, click the arrow to the right of the field, and select one of the following:
Select Uniform to define a uniform boundary condition.
Select User-defined to define the boundary condition in user subroutine DISP. See the following sections for more information:
If you are defining the boundary condition directly in the editor (and not in user subroutine DISP), perform the following steps:
Use the appropriate method to define the boundary condition:
If no text fields appear next to each degree of freedom:
Toggle on a degree of freedom to fix the value either at zero (if you are defining a degree of freedom in the initial step) or at its final value at the end of the previous analysis step (if you are defining the degree of freedom in the second analysis step or in a later step.)
Toggle off a degree of freedom to leave the degree of freedom unconstrained.
If text fields appear next to each degree of freedom:
Toggle on a degree of freedom to constrain the degree of freedom. The text field becomes available in which you can specify a value for the degree of freedom. If you are creating the boundary condition in this step, a default value of zero appears in the text field. If you are modifying the boundary condition in this step, the value propagated from the previous step appears in the text field.
Toggle off a degree of freedom to leave the degree of freedom unconstrained. If you toggle off a degree of freedom after modifying the default or propagated value in the text field, the modified value is lost. If you toggle that degree of freedom back on, the default or propagated value reappears in the text field.
Click the arrow to the right of the Amplitude field, and select the amplitude of your choice from the list that appears. Alternatively, you can click Create to create a new amplitude. (See Chapter 38, The Amplitude toolset,” for more information.)
Click OK to save your data and to exit the editor.
If you are defining the boundary condition in user subroutine DISP, perform the following steps:
If desired, use the following techniques to define displacement:
Toggle on a degree of freedom to constrain the degree of freedom. If you are in the initial step, that degree of freedom is set to zero. If you are in any step other than the initial step, a text field becomes available in which you can specify a value for the degree of freedom.
Toggle off a degree of freedom to leave the degree of freedom unconstrained.
Click OK to save your data and to exit the editor.
Enter the Job module and display the job editor for the analysis job of interest. (For more information, see Creating, editing, and manipulating jobs, Section 18.5.)
In the job editor, click the General tab, and specify the file containing the user subroutine that defines the boundary condition. For more information, see Specifying general job settings, Section 18.6.6.
Note: You can specify only one user subroutine file in the job editor; if your analysis involves more than one user subroutine, you must combine the user subroutines into one file and then specify that file.