jongyonkim
Electrical
- Aug 3, 2006
- 24
Hi,
With ABAQUS/Explicit, I'm modeling the mechanical bending behavior of a 100mm x 100mm x 0.5mm flat sheet of Silicon. I apply the force in the center and see where it breaks (when Mises stress = yield stress).
Since the plate is sufficiently thin relative to other dimensions, I decided to model it as a shell. (I read in the manual that the ratio of the relative dimension should be around 1/15...in this case it is 1/200, so it holds). I also turn on Nlgeom to account for the excess bending.
I get drastically different results from using the 3D continuum (Explicit element C3D4, with section type: "solid, homogeneous") geometry and the 2D shell (Explicit element S4R, with section type: "shell, homogeneous") with specified shell thickness - for one, the Mises stress distribution differs on 3-6 orders of magnitude at a given displacement of the center as the force is applied in the center. ALLWK is also much higher in the shell (for some reason) than in the continuum per displacement.
I am wondering why this is the case.
Thank you.
With ABAQUS/Explicit, I'm modeling the mechanical bending behavior of a 100mm x 100mm x 0.5mm flat sheet of Silicon. I apply the force in the center and see where it breaks (when Mises stress = yield stress).
Since the plate is sufficiently thin relative to other dimensions, I decided to model it as a shell. (I read in the manual that the ratio of the relative dimension should be around 1/15...in this case it is 1/200, so it holds). I also turn on Nlgeom to account for the excess bending.
I get drastically different results from using the 3D continuum (Explicit element C3D4, with section type: "solid, homogeneous") geometry and the 2D shell (Explicit element S4R, with section type: "shell, homogeneous") with specified shell thickness - for one, the Mises stress distribution differs on 3-6 orders of magnitude at a given displacement of the center as the force is applied in the center. ALLWK is also much higher in the shell (for some reason) than in the continuum per displacement.
I am wondering why this is the case.
Thank you.