On the use of an enhanced transverse shear strain shell element for problems involving large rotations

From MaRDI portal
Publication:1416813

DOI10.1007/s00466-002-0388-xzbMath1090.74693OpenAlexW2125862371MaRDI QIDQ1416813

D. Massart

Publication date: 16 December 2003

Published in: Computational Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00466-002-0388-x



Related Items

A solid-shell Cosserat point element (SSCPE) for elastic thin structures at finite deformation, Corotational nonlinear analyses of laminated shell structures using a 4-node quadrilateral flat shell element with drilling stiffness, Nonlinear thermo-elastic phase-field fracture of thin-walled structures relying on solid shell concepts, Generalized modal element method. II: Application to eight-node asymmetric and symmetric solid-shell elements in linear analysis, Optimal low-order fully integrated solid-shell elements, An improved assumed strain solid-shell element formulation with physical stabilization for geometric non-linear applications and elastic-plastic stability analysis, A new one-point quadrature enhanced assumed strain (EAS) solid-shell element with multiple integration points along thickness: Part I-geometrically linear applications, A reduced integration solid-shell finite element based on the EAS and the ANS concept-Large deformation problems, One-point quadrature ANS solid-shell element based on a displacement variational formulation. I: Geometrically linear assessment, Enhanced assumed strain (EAS) and assumed natural strain (ANS) methods for one-point quadrature solid-shell elements, One point quadrature shell element with through-thickness stretch, On the assumed natural strain method to alleviate locking in solid-shell NURBS-based finite elements, Assumed natural strain NURBS-based solid-shell element for the analysis of large deformation elasto-plastic thin-shell structures, 4-node combined shell element with semi-EAS-ANS strain interpolations in 6-parameter shell theories with drilling degrees of freedom