Aislingoh
Mechanical
- Aug 17, 2011
- 23
Hi all,
I am trying to model a sharp knife penetrating skin. I have some ideas about how to do this but I would invite any comments from all you experts on my method at this early stage.
I am using explicit. The knife is modelled as rigid body and is driven via boundary conditions. The skin is modelled as a hyperelastic material.
1. What is the best type of interaction to use? currently I am using general contact explicit and it seems to work ok. but perhaps surface-to-surface contact would be better? The abaqus example of a projectile penetrating a plate uses surface-to-surface contact but I found general contact solves quicker and appears to do the job better too.
2. I do not intend to model the actual damage. What I plan to do is to use a failure criterion (such as Von mises) along with element deletion. I am using the submodelling technique to get a higher mesh density in the region of interest, without sacrificing efficiency. Currently the geometry of the blade tip is modelled as a point (no tip radius). Will this lead to stress singularity and if so, will that matter since I am using element deletion anyway? The alternative is to introduce a small tip radius (around 1micron), but in this case I will need a very fine mesh about the blade tip to capture this geometry. And since it's a rigid body anyway, it seems like a waste of time and effort!
Please feel free to comment on any aspects of this, I would love to hear the opinion of the community.
Thanks,
Aisling
I am trying to model a sharp knife penetrating skin. I have some ideas about how to do this but I would invite any comments from all you experts on my method at this early stage.
I am using explicit. The knife is modelled as rigid body and is driven via boundary conditions. The skin is modelled as a hyperelastic material.
1. What is the best type of interaction to use? currently I am using general contact explicit and it seems to work ok. but perhaps surface-to-surface contact would be better? The abaqus example of a projectile penetrating a plate uses surface-to-surface contact but I found general contact solves quicker and appears to do the job better too.
2. I do not intend to model the actual damage. What I plan to do is to use a failure criterion (such as Von mises) along with element deletion. I am using the submodelling technique to get a higher mesh density in the region of interest, without sacrificing efficiency. Currently the geometry of the blade tip is modelled as a point (no tip radius). Will this lead to stress singularity and if so, will that matter since I am using element deletion anyway? The alternative is to introduce a small tip radius (around 1micron), but in this case I will need a very fine mesh about the blade tip to capture this geometry. And since it's a rigid body anyway, it seems like a waste of time and effort!
Please feel free to comment on any aspects of this, I would love to hear the opinion of the community.
Thanks,
Aisling