A finite element flux-corrected transport method for wave propagation in heterogeneous solids
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1662441
Recommendations
- An FE-FCT method with implicit functions for the study of shock wave propagation in solids
- Discontinuity-capturing operators for elastodynamics
- A mixed XFEM formulation to simulate dynamic wave propagation in nearly incompressible materials
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 2061747
- Finite element heterogeneous multiscale method for elastic waves in heterogeneous media
Cites work
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5719287 (Why is no real title available?)
- A finite element method for crack growth without remeshing
- A lattice Boltzmann method for shock wave propagation in solids
- An FE-FCT method with implicit functions for the study of shock wave propagation in solids
- Computational modelling of impact damage in brittle materials
- Explicit time integration algorithms for structural dynamics with optimal numerical dissipation
- Extended finite element method for quasi-brittle fracture
- Extended finite element simulation of quasi-brittle fracture in functionally graded materials
- Finite element method. Vol. 1: The basis.
- Flux correction tools for finite elements
- Flux-corrected transport. I: SHASTA, a fluid transport algorithm that works
- Flux-corrected transport. II: Generalizations of the method
- Multidimensional FEM-FCT schemes for arbitrary time stepping
- Simulating shock to detonation transition: Algorithm and results
Cited in
(8)- An FE-FCT method with implicit functions for the study of shock wave propagation in solids
- Wave propagation in solid and fluid structures using finite element transfer matrices
- Explicit multistep time integration for discontinuous elastic stress wave propagation in heterogeneous solids
- Failure assessment of layered composites subject to impact loadings: a finite element, sigma-point Kalman filter approach
- Finite and spectral cell method for wave propagation in heterogeneous materials
- A non-oscillatory method for spallation studies
- Identification of strength and toughness of quasi-brittle materials from spall tests: a sigma-point Kalman filter approach
- Monte Carlo simulation of micro-cracking in polysilicon MEMS exposed to shocks
This page was built for publication: A finite element flux-corrected transport method for wave propagation in heterogeneous solids
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q1662441)