Routes for efficient computational homogenization of~nonlinear materials using the~proper generalized decompositions

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 02:50, 30 January 2024 by Import240129110155 (talk | contribs) (Created automatically from import240129110155)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Publication:358480

DOI10.1007/s11831-010-9051-4zbMath1269.74187OpenAlexW1996183696WikidataQ113323915 ScholiaQ113323915MaRDI QIDQ358480

Francisco Chinesta, Amine Ammar, H. Lamari, Patrice Cartraud, Grégory Legrain, Frederic Jacquemin

Publication date: 9 August 2013

Published in: Archives of Computational Methods in Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11831-010-9051-4




Related Items (17)

Recent advances on topology optimization of multiscale nonlinear structuresA manifold learning approach for integrated computational materials engineeringkPCA-based parametric solutions within the PGD frameworkOn reduced models in nonlinear solid mechanicsAn enhanced grain-boundary framework for computational homogenization and micro-cracking simulations of polycrystalline materialsTopology optimization of multiscale elastoviscoplastic structuresTowards a framework for non‐linear thermal models in shell domainsTensor-based methods for numerical homogenization from high-resolution images\(\mathrm{FE}^2\) multiscale in linear elasticity based on parametrized microscale models using proper generalized decompositionA PGD-based homogenization technique for the resolution of nonlinear multiscale problemsData-driven reduced homogenization for transient diffusion problems with emergent history effectsPGD-based \textit{computational vademecum} for efficient design, optimization and controlMultiscale computational homogenization: review and proposal of a new enhanced-first-order methodMultiscale structural topology optimization with an approximate constitutive model for local material microstructureNonlinear reduced order homogenization of materials including cohesive interfacesA representative volume element network (RVE-net) for accelerating RVE analysis, microscale material identification, and defect characterizationA literature survey of low-rank tensor approximation techniques



Cites Work


This page was built for publication: Routes for efficient computational homogenization of~nonlinear materials using the~proper generalized decompositions