Products: Abaqus/Standard Abaqus/Explicit Abaqus/CAE
Mass elements:
allow the introduction of concentrated mass that is either isotropic or anisotropic at a point;
are associated with the three translational degrees of freedom at a node.
In addition to point masses, Abaqus provides a convenient nonstructural mass definition that can be used to smear mass from features that have negligible structural stiffness over a region that is typically adjacent to the nonstructural feature. The nonstructural mass can be specified in the form of a total mass value, a mass per unit volume, a mass per unit area, or a mass per unit length (see “Nonstructural mass definition,” Section 2.7.1).
You specify a mass magnitude, which is associated with the three translational degrees of freedom at the node of the element. Specify mass, not weight. You must associate this mass with a region of your model.
Input File Usage: | *MASS, ELSET=name mass magnitude |
where the ELSET parameter refers to a set of MASS elements. |
Abaqus/CAE Usage: | Property or Interaction module: Special |
You can define a general mass matrix explicitly in Abaqus/Standard if the introduction of individual terms on and off the diagonal of the mass matrix is desired. See “User-defined elements,” Section 32.15.1, for details.
Input File Usage: | Use both of the following options: |
*USER ELEMENT *MATRIX |
Abaqus/CAE Usage: | Defining the mass matrix explicitly is not supported in Abaqus/CAE. |
You can specify the mass as anisotropic by giving the three principal values and the principal directions. When the orientation of the principal directions is not specified, they are assumed to coincide with the global axes. In a large-displacement analysis the local axes of the anisotropic mass rotate with the rotation, if active, of the node to which the anisotropic mass is attached. The rotation degree of freedom is active at a node if that node is connected to a beam, a conventional shell, a rotary inertia element, or a rigid body. You can specify mass proportional loads such as gravitation on an anisotropic mass. Damping and mass scaling can also be used with an anisotropic mass.
Specify mass, not weight. You must associate this mass with a region of your model.
Input File Usage: | *MASS, ELSET=name, TYPE=ANISOTROPIC, ORIENTATION=orientation_name |
where the ELSET parameter refers to a set of MASS elements. |
Abaqus/CAE Usage: | Property or Interaction module: Special |
In Abaqus/Standard you can define mass proportional damping for direct-integration dynamic analysis or composite damping for modal dynamic analysis. Although both damping definitions can be specified for a set of MASS elements, only the damping that is relevant to the particular dynamic analysis procedure will be used.
In Abaqus/Explicit mass proportional damping can be defined for MASS elements.
You can define inertia proportional damping for MASS elements in direct-integration dynamic analysis or explicit dynamic analysis. See “Material damping,” Section 26.1.1, for details.
Input File Usage: | *MASS, ALPHA= |
Abaqus/CAE Usage: | Property or Interaction module: Special |
You can define the fraction of critical damping to be used with the MASS elements when calculating composite damping factors for the modes when used in modal dynamic analysis. See “Material damping,” Section 26.1.1, for details.
Input File Usage: | *MASS, COMPOSITE= |
Abaqus/CAE Usage: | Property or Interaction module: Special |