Publication:3636058
From MaRDI portal
zbMath1180.35521arXivmath/0607596MaRDI QIDQ3636058
Publication date: 30 June 2009
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0607596
74R10: Brittle fracture
74G65: Energy minimization in equilibrium problems in solid mechanics
35Q74: PDEs in connection with mechanics of deformable solids
Related Items
Visco-energetic solutions to some rate-independent systems in damage, delamination, and plasticity, Convergence of alternate minimization schemes for phase-field fracture and damage, Stress-driven local-solution approach to quasistatic brittle delamination, Maximally-dissipative local solutions to rate-independent systems and application to damage and delamination problems, Quasistatic evolution in perfect plasticity as limit of dynamic processes, Elastic bars with cohesive energy, Quasistatic delamination problem, From rate-dependent to rate-independent brittle crack propagation, A quasilinear differential inclusion for viscous and rate-independent damage systems in non-smooth domains, Crack growth in polyconvex materials, The Gilbert equation with dry-friction-type damping, Separately global solutions to rate-independent processes in large-strain inelasticity, Irreversibility and alternate minimization in phase field fracture: a viscosity approach, Energetic versus maximally-dissipative local solutions of a quasi-static rate-independent mixed-mode delamination model, A vanishing viscosity approach to a quasistatic evolution problem with nonconvex energy, Generation of balanced viscosity solutions to rate-independent systems via variational convergence, Optimal control of a rate-independent evolution equation via viscous regularization, Regularity of weak solutions to rate-independent systems in one-dimension, Limit of viscous dynamic processes in delamination as the viscosity and inertia vanish, Linearly constrained evolutions of critical points and an application to cohesive fractures, BV solutions and viscosity approximations of rate-independent systems, A variational characterization of rate-independent evolution