The Altair Bushing Model includes a Mount Limits feature, which lets you model the
material contact that occurs between the bodies that a bushing connects. The bodies are
flexible and may deflect under the load being transmitted. Given enough bushing deflection,
the bodies may contact one another for negative and positive deflections in each
direction.
When bushings deflect, a large amount of contact can occur between the bodies they
connect limiting the deflection. However, these limits are dependent on the geometry
of the bodies and are not an intrinsic bushing property. Therefore mount limits are
specified in a separate Mount Limits Property
File (*.gbi). In this file you can:
Activate mount limits for a bushing.
Define gap, stiffness and damping properties that are appropriate for the
bodies that the bushing connects.
When the bushing deflection closes the gap between the bodies in a specific
direction, the mount limit in the corresponding direction exerts a force or torque
to limit the deflection. The following image shows how such a contact can occur at
the connection between the A-Arm and the Strut in a suspension.
The mount limit force or torque adds to the bushing force or torque and acts to
increase the normal force or torque input to the bushing friction and the local
deflection of the bodies.
Mount Limits depend on the geometry of the bodies that mount the bushing, and not the
bushing itself. Therefore, the displacement and velocity used for computing the
mount limit forces and moments, unlike the bushing, is not scaled, offset or
coupled.
You can define positive and negative mount limits for any set of bushing directions:
{FX, FY, FZ, TX, TY, and TZ}.
A positive mount limit acts to limit positive displacement in a given
direction by producing a negative force or torque.
A negative mount limit acts to limit bushing negative displacement and
produces a positive force or torque.
All the input parameters like stiffness, gap, and exponent for either
positive or negative mount limits are always entered as positive
values.
Positive Mount Limits
Let:
be displacement and velocity between the I body and J body less any
local structural deflection as computed by the mount-stiffness
CONTROL_STATEEQN.
be the gap that must be closed for material contact to occur.
be the stiffness of the limit.
be the exponent applied to the deflection. ≥ 1.0 to ensure a constant or rising
stiffness rate with deflection.
be the damping coefficient.
be the deflection at which the damping is fully active. For deflections
less then , the damping force is modified by the
step function to prevent discontinuity of the contact force.
Then the force or torque in the kth direction for a positive mount limit
is defined
as:
if (Mount_Limits_Are_Inactive OR )
= 0.0
else
Negative Mount Limits
For a negative mount limit, the limit force is computed in the same manner as a
positive mount limit, however the input displacement and velocity are negated as is
the output force. Again all the input parameters are positive. The force/torque
computation for a negative mount limit
is: