The Annealing Process
The anneal procedure is intended to simulate the relaxation of stresses and plastic strains that occurs as metals are heated to high temperatures. Physically, annealing is the process of heating a metal part to a high temperature to allow the microstructure to recrystallize, removing dislocations caused by cold working of the material. During the anneal procedure Abaqus/Explicit sets all appropriate state variables to zero. These variables include stresses, backstresses, plastic strains, and velocities. In the case of metal porous plasticity, the void volume fraction is also set to zero, such that the material becomes fully dense.
There is no time scale in an annealing step; therefore, time does not advance. The annealing process occurs instantaneously. No data are required for the anneal procedure.
Temperatures
Thermal strains are set to zero, and the temperature at all nodes in the model will be set to a uniform temperature or will be maintained at the current temperature during the anneal procedure. By default, the temperature at all nodes is maintained at the current temperature. You can specify a different final temperature, .