The eight node plane stress element is a general purpose plane stress
element. It is actually a special case of shell element: the structure
is assumed to have a symmetry plane parallel to the x-y plane and the
loading only acts in-plane. In general, the z-coordinates are
zero. Just like in the case of the shell element, the plane stress
element is expanded into a C3D20 or C3D20R element. Figures
and
apply. From the above
premises the following conclusions can be drawn:
The use of plane stress elements can also lead to knots, namely, if the thickness varies in a discontinuous way, or if plane stress elements are combined with other 1D or 2D elements such as axisymmetric elements. The connection with the plane stress elements, however, is modeled as a hinge.
Distributed loading in plane stress elements is different
from shell distributed loading: for the plane stress element it is
in-plane, for the shell element it is out-of-plane. Distributed
loading in plane stress elements is defined on the
*DLOAD card with the labels P1 up to P4. The number
indicates the face as defined in Figure .
If a plane stress element is connected to a structure consisting of 3D elements the motion of this structure in the out-of-plane direction (z-direction) is not restricted by its connection to the 2D elements. The user has to take care that any rigid body motion of the structure involving the z-direction is taken care of, if appropriate. This particularly applies to any springs connected to plane stress elements, look at test example spring4 for an illustration.
Notice that structures containing plane stress elements should be defined in the global x-y plane, i.e. z=0 for all nodes.