ProductsAbaqus/StandardAbaqus/Explicit At any time we use a local orthonormal basis system , where and are in the surface of the membrane and is normal to the membrane. The basis system is defined by the standard convention used in Abaqus for a basis on a surface in space. In this section Greek indices take the range 1, 2, and Latin indices take the range 1, 2, 3. Greek indices are used to refer to components in the first two directions of the local orthonormal basis (in the surface of the membrane). EquilibriumThe virtual work contribution from the internal forces in a membrane element is where is the Cauchy stress, is the virtual rate of deformation (, where is the virtual velocity field), and V is the current volume of the membrane. We assume that only the membrane stress components in the surface of the membrane are nonzero: . Then Equation 1 simplifies to where and , where t is the current thickness of the element and A is its current area. JacobianThe consistent Jacobian contribution from the element is Since we assume that , the first term in the integrand is We also assume that there is no transverse shear strain of the element: , and, hence, . Thus, the second term in the integrand is We can write this out as Thickness changeIn geometrically nonlinear analyses the cross-section thickness changes as a function of the membrane strain with a user-defined “effective section Poisson's ratio,” . In plane stress ; linear elasticity gives Treating these as logarithmic strains, where A is the area on the membrane's reference surface. This nonlinear analogy with linear elasticity leads to the thickness change relationship: For the material is incompressible; for the section thickness does not change. Total deformationThe deformation gradient is . Since we take normal to the current membrane surface and assume no transverse shear of the membrane, By the thickness change assumption above, the direct out-of-plane component of the deformation gradient is To calculate the deformation gradient at the end of the increment, first we calculate the two tangent vectors at the end of the increment defined by the derivative of the position with respect to the reference coordinates: where is obtained by interpolation with the shape function derivatives from the nodal coordinates and the change of coordinate transformation is based on the reference geometry. The deformation gradient components are defined To choose the element basis directions , we do the following. Find any pair of in-plane orthonormal vectors (by the standard Abaqus projection). Then find the angle such that the element basis vectors , defined satisfy the symmetry condition Using the definitions of in terms of in the above equation, the rotation angle is found to be where The deformation gradient then follows immediately. For elastomers we work directly in terms of and . For inelastic material models we need measures of incremental strain and average material rotation, which we compute from defined by , where is the deformation gradient at the start of the current increment (at increment “n”): We can define the components of by and, hence, define by inversion. The incremental strain and rotation are then defined from the polar decomposition , where is a rotation matrix and is a pure stretch: (see Deformation). We find the and the corresponding eigenvectors by solving the eigenproblem for Since we assume no transverse shear in the membrane, the normal direction (along ) is always a principal direction, so the eigenproblem is the problem The logarithmic strain increment is then and the average material rotation increment is defined from the polar decomposition of the increment: Due to the choice of the element basis directions, we can assume that |