Finite element simulation of dynamic strain-localization: A multi-scale problem
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1913218
DOI10.1016/0045-7825(94)00058-UzbMath0852.73066OpenAlexW1989675902WikidataQ127662053 ScholiaQ127662053MaRDI QIDQ1913218
Benjamin Loret, Arghya Deb, Jean H. Prévost
Publication date: 24 November 1996
Published in: Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0045-7825(94)00058-u
bifurcation analysiselasto-plastic solidseffects of material parametersDuvaut-Lions visco-plastic regularization procedurePetrov-Galerkin type procedurepost-localization analysis
Finite element methods applied to problems in solid mechanics (74S05) Plastic materials, materials of stress-rate and internal-variable type (74C99)
Related Items
Automated band identification procedure for dynamic strain localization, Adaptive meshing for dynamic strain localization, An adaptive wavelet-Galerkin method for an elastic-plastic-damage constitutive model: 1D problem
Cites Work
- Development and testing of stable, invariant, isoparametric curvilinear 2- and 3-D hybrid-stress elements
- The spectral overlay on finite elements for problems with high gradients
- A finite element with a unidirectionally enriched strain field for localization analysis
- A finite element method for localized failure analysis
- A finite element with embedded localization zones
- Parametrized variational principles encompassing compressible and incompressible elasticity
- Failure in plain and reinforced concrete -- an analysis of crack width and crack spacing
- Dynamic strain localization in elasto-(visco-)plastic solids. I: General formulation and one-dimensional examples
- Dynamic strain localization in elasto-(visco-)plastic solids. II: Plane strain examples
- Finite elements with displacement interpolated embedded localization lines insensitive to mesh size and distortions
- On the Variational Foundations of Assumed Strain Methods
- Generalization of selective integration procedures to anisotropic and nonlinear media
- A class of mixed assumed strain methods and the method of incompatible modes
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item