An identity pair (
Identity Boundary Pair (
)) is a pair that, by default, makes the fields across two connected boundaries (one from each connecting object in an assembly) continuous. This is equivalent to the continuity that is obtained by default on interior boundaries in a geometry created by forming a union. Some physics provide special boundary conditions for identity pairs to model “slit conditions” such as resistive layers. You can specify boundary conditions for these pairs from the
Pairs submenu at the bottom of the boundary condition part of the context menu for the physics feature node. The nodes in the
Model Builder that represent pair boundary conditions use an icon with a pair symbol in the lower-left corner:
. There are also similar
Identity Edge Pair (
) and
Identity Point Pair (
) pair nodes.
A contact pair (
) is a pair that define boundaries where the parts can come into contact but cannot penetrate each other under deformation for modeling of structural contact and multiphysics contact.
This section is visible with the Advanced Physics Options enabled in the
Show More Options dialog box and only for features that are allowed to contribute to nonoverlapping parts. Here you can modify how a particular features act as a fallback feature on the nonoverlapping parts, using the
Allowed region list with the options
Fallback and nonpair regions (the default),
Nonpair region, and
All regions. For the first and default option, the feature has the fallback behavior described above. Select the
Nonpair region option if you do not want the feature to act as a fallback feature at all. All parts of the feature’s selection that overlaps with any pair feature will then be excluded from the feature’s selection. Choose the
All regions option if you want the feature to contribute to the entire selection, including the parts where the pair is in contact. The feature’s conditions will then contribute also with pair features conditions.