It is possible to change the normal stiffness factor of a contact pair between the load steps using the Contact step control object.
Tagged: 19, contact, General, mechanical, structural-and-thermal, structural-mechanics
-
-
March 17, 2023 at 9:00 amFAQParticipant
Yes, the Contact step control can be found by picking on the environment branch in the Mechanical tree (such as Static Structural) and then picking Conditions in the toolbar. There you will find the Contact step control object.
-
Introducing Ansys Electronics Desktop on Ansys Cloud
The Watch & Learn video article provides an overview of cloud computing from Electronics Desktop and details the product licenses and subscriptions to ANSYS Cloud Service that are...
How to Create a Reflector for a Center High-Mounted Stop Lamp (CHMSL)
This video article demonstrates how to create a reflector for a center high-mounted stop lamp. Optical Part design in Ansys SPEOS enables the design and validation of multiple...
Introducing the GEKO Turbulence Model in Ansys Fluent
The GEKO (GEneralized K-Omega) turbulence model offers a flexible, robust, general-purpose approach to RANS turbulence modeling. Introducing 2 videos: Part 1Â provides background information on the model and a...
Postprocessing on Ansys EnSight
This video demonstrates exporting data from Fluent in EnSight Case Gold format, and it reviews the basic postprocessing capabilities of EnSight.
- What is the difference between secant and instantaneous coefficients of thermal expansion (CTE)?
- How to use the Newton-Raphson residuals option under Solution Information?
- Does ECAD trace mapping support more than one type of trace material (usually copper) in the same layer?
- How can I understand Beam Probe results?
- ANSYS Mechanical: Fatigue Crack Growth Analysis using SMART Crack Growth
- How to find total heat flowing through a surface in Mechanical?
- How to reduce contact penetration?
- How to plot stresses of a beam connection in Workbench?
- Difference Between Environment Temperature and Reference Temperature in Mechanical
- How to define frictional coefficient as a function of relative sliding velocity
© 2024 Copyright ANSYS, Inc. All rights reserved.