Defining contact in Abaqus/Standard

The first step in defining contact pairs (and optionally general contact) in Abaqus/Standard is to define the surfaces of the bodies that could potentially come into contact. The next step is to specify the surfaces that interact with each other; these are the contact interactions. The final step is to define the mechanical property models that govern the behavior of the surfaces when they are in contact.

The definition of surfaces is optional for general contact since an all-inclusive element-based surface is automatically created when general contact is used. You can use specific surface pairings to include regions not included in the default surface, to preclude interactions between different regions of a model, or to override global contact property assignments. For example, if you want to apply a certain friction coefficient to all but a few surfaces in your model, you can assign the primary friction coefficient globally and then override this property for a given pair of user-defined surfaces.


In this section:

Contact interactions
Slave and master surfaces
Contact discretization
Small and finite sliding
Element selection
Contact algorithm