Thanks for your ideas;
The symbol for this material loss factor is the greek 'h' Im not sure the name for it, it looks like an english 'n' with the right side extending down. I am currently working from methods I read about in conference papers which state this material loss factor as being 0.4 to 0.7 for different viscoelastic materials, a unitless quantity. It can vary with frequency, although w/in a certain range they used it as constant in the simulation. Another paper called it simply 'damping factor' in the material properties table. It must be an inherent property of the material, not the system since both works are aimed at maximizing the loss factor of the system by re-distributing the damping material across the surface of steel structures, a kind of optimization. The simulation I have been trying requires you enter the damping property of the material in the Property module (of CAE) leading to:
*Material, name=Material-1
*Damping, composite=0.4
then to activate these in the Step module:
*Step......
*Steady State Dynamics
........
*Modal Damping, modal=COMPOSITE
The only other option in the material definition is to use alpha&beta which I read in ABQ manuals applies to direct integration steps (eg general dynamic implicit) while I am using the Steady State Dynamics which uses the composite.
Other options exist at the step definition including direct modal (for critical damping fraction), structural (damping constant having units)and also the Rayleigh. However I must use something I defined in the material definition because the aim is to see how the different distributions of the damping material across the structure affect the overall system loss.
Thanks..