HyperMesh and BatchMesher

hmabaqus Results Translation

hmabaqus Results Translation

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hmabaqus Results Translation

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hmabaqus translates a binary or ASCII Abaqus (.fil) results file into a HyperMesh binary results file. The syntax to run the translator is:

hmabaqus [options] <inputfile> <outputfile> <modelfile>

To Run hmabaqus From Hypermesh

1.On the Analysis page, select the Solver panel.
2.Click the translator toggle and select hmabaqus.
3.For input file, click browse and select the .fil file.
4.Click Open.
5.For output file, click browse and write down the output file name.
6.Click Save.
7.Enter the options. To create an h3d file for a specific result, add –h3d after the options.
8.Click solve.

 

One or more of the following options can be used.  Use the command hmabaqus-u to obtain a list of these options.

Flag

Meaning

-d

Displacements

-rot

Rotations

-v

Velocities

-a

Accelerations

-nflux

NFLUX

-nflxrot

nflux rotations

-von

von Mises

-tr

Tresca

-hydropr

Hydrostatic Pressure

-tsi

Third Stress Invariant

-pstrs

Principal Stresses

-shstrs

Shear Stresses

-sed

Strain Energy Density

-temp

Temperature

-sinktemp

Sink Temperature

-filmcoef

Film Coefficient

-ecursmag

ECURS magnitude

-ncursmag

NCURS magnitude

-recurmag

RECUR magnitude

-ecdmag

ECD magnitude

-ecd1

ECD1

-ecd2

ECD2

-ecd3

ECD3

-resflux

Residual Flux

-conflux

Concentrated flux

-intflux

Internal Flux

-fluxs

FLUXS

-nodetemp

Nodal Temperatures

-ts

Total Strains

-ls

Logarithmic Strains

-ns

Nominal Strains

-ps

Plastic Strains

-es

Elastic Strains

-cs

Creep Strains

-ths

Thermal Strains

-pstrn

Principal Strains

-pnomsn

Principal Nominal Strains

-plogsn

Principal Logarithmic Strains

-pps

Principal Plastic Strains

-pes

Principal Elastic Strains

-pths

Principal Thermal Strains

-stress

Stresses

-rmsstrs

RMS Stresses

-rmsstrn

RMS Strains

-rf

Reaction Forces

-rm

Reaction Moments

-pl

Point Loads

-thick

Shell Thickness

-sinv

Maximums (default off)

-s1

First Surface (default off)

-s2

Second Surface (default off)

-cr

Contact Results

-epot

Electrical Potential

-por

Pore or Acoustic Pressure (default off)

-ps1v

Principal Stress 1 (Vector)

-ps2v

Principal Stress 2 (Vector)

-ps3v

Principal Stress 3 (Vector)

-sh1v

Shear Stress 1 (Vector)

-sh2v

Shear Stress 2 (Vector)

-sv1

State Variable 1 (default off)

-sv2

State Variable 2 (default off)

-svn

State Variable n (default off)

-sv20

State Variable 20 (default off)

-notrans

Do not convert local displacements into global (default off)

-pc56

Read results for v5.6 on PC (default off)

-maxsim

Max simulations (default 999) (default off)

-step

For specific STEP results (default off)

-inc

For specific ITERATION results        (default off)

-freq

For specific frequency of ITERATION results (default off)

-disk

Translation is performed on disk

-size

Number of entities (10000 default)

-file

Scratch file name

-h3d

Outputs file to an H3D file instead of to an hmresults file.  The file includes model and results information that was translated.  The model must contain geometry for it to be output to an H3D file. (default off)

-noip

Turns off all processing of element integration point values.  If you ask Abaqus to average values to element centroids, this option makes a considerable difference in the amount of memory needed.  If you also specify a result type that is found on element integration points, and the translator comes across such a result during processing, it reports an error. (default off)

-sv1,
-sv2,...,
-sv20

State variables were being treated differently for some element groups from others.  For some element types, they were always included, and, for others, they were processed only if specifically listed, with the default listing all of them. Now, all are uniform.  They are translated only if you requests them to be translated.  Also, the translator used to allocate memory to process all 20 allowable state variables whether you asked for any or not.  Now, you can turn them on individually, and use just the minimum memory necessary, or you can turn on the first N of them using -nsdv. (default off)

-nsdv <number>

Turns on the first <number> state variables (max of 20).  If you list both individual state variables and also the -nsdv option, the listed ones are the only ones processed.  You can get complete compatibility with older versions by using "-nsdv 20". (default off)

Note:hmabaqus supports results for a range of increments and steps.  It also supports results with a specific frequency.

For example,

"hmabaqus -inc  10 12 14 40 55" gives results for  increments 10 12 14 40 55 for all steps.
"hmabaqus -step 1 5 6 19" gives results for all increments in steps 1, 5, 6 and 19.
"hmabaqus -step 1 5 6 19  -inc 10 15 26 31 55" gives results for increments 10, 15, 26, 31, 55 in steps 1, 5, 6 and 19.
"hmabaqus -step 1 5 6 19  -freq 2" give results for 1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th .... last increments in steps 1, 5, 6 and 19.

 

In addition, the following parameters are also available when the results translation is not performed on the analysis platform and when the results file is binary.  One of these parameters may need to be specified to indicate the platform where the analysis result file was created.

Parameter

Analysis File Created On

-cray

Cray

-dec

Dec 5000

-decalpha

Dec Alpha

-hp

Hewlett Packard.

-ibm

IBM RS\6000

-pc

PC

-sgi

SGI

-sun

Sun.

 

 

See Also:

Abaqus Interface Overview

Supported Data Types

Translating Complex Results

Translating Element Results for Different Positions