Comparison of several staggered atomistic-to-continuum concurrent coupling strategies
DOI10.1016/j.cma.2014.04.013zbMath1423.74033OpenAlexW1968196670MaRDI QIDQ1667294
D. Davydov, Jean-Paul Pelteret, Paul Steinmann
Publication date: 28 August 2018
Published in: Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cma.2014.04.013
large strainfinite elementsmolecular mechanicsIrving-Kirkwood-Noll procedureconcurrent multiscale methodsatomic-to-continuum coupling methods
Numerical approximation of solutions of equilibrium problems in solid mechanics (74G15) Molecular, statistical, and kinetic theories in solid mechanics (74A25)
Related Items (2)
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- A comparison of staggered solution schemes for coupled particle-continuum systems modeled with the Arlequin method
- Spatial filters for bridging molecular dynamics with finite elements at finite temperatures
- Concurrent coupling of atomistic and continuum models at finite temperature
- A finite element framework for continua with boundary energies. I: The two-dimensional case
- Adaptive multiscale modeling of polymeric materials with Arlequin coupling and goals algorithms
- An introduction to computational nanomechanics and materials
- A multiscale projection method for the analysis of carbon nanotubes
- A variational approach to coarse graining of equilibrium and non-equilibrium atomistic description at finite temperature
- On the application of the Arlequin method to the coupling of particle and continuum models
- A multiscale coupling method for the modeling of dynamics of solids with application to brittle cracks
- An atomistic-to-continuum coupling method for heat transfer in solids
- Computational analysis of modeling error for the coupling of particle and continuum models by the Arlequin method
- Concurrent AtC coupling based on a blend of the continuum stress and the atomistic force
- Fast parallel algorithms for short-range molecular dynamics
- Coupling of atomistic and continuum simulations using a bridging scale decomposition.
- Three-dimensional bridging scale analysis of dynamic fracture
- A material frame approach for evaluating continuum variables in atomistic simulations
- Variational boundary conditions for molecular dynamics simulations: treatment of the loading condition
- A concurrent multiscale method based on the alternating Schwarz scheme for coupling atomic and continuum scales with first-order compatibility
- An Arlequin-based method to couple molecular dynamics and finite element simulations of amorphous polymers and nanocomposites
- Multiscale modeling of the dynamics of solids at finite temperature
- Coupled atomistic--continuum simulations using arbitrary overlapping domains
- Reviewing the roots of continuum formulations in molecular systems. Part III: Stresses, couple stresses, heat fluxes
- Reviewing the roots of continuum formulations in molecular systems. Part I: Particle dynamics, statistical physics, mass and linear momentum balance equations
- Concurrent multiscale modeling of amorphous materials in 3D
- On multiscale non‐equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations
- Multiscale methods for mechanical science of complex materials: Bridging from quantum to stochastic multiresolution continuum
- deal.II—A general-purpose object-oriented finite element library
- An embedded statistical method for coupling molecular dynamics and finite element analyses
- A phonon heat bath approach for the atomistic and multiscale simulation of solids
- A bridging domain and strain computation method for coupled atomistic–continuum modelling of solids
- Connecting Atomistic-to-Continuum Coupling and Domain Decomposition
- Gmsh: A 3-D finite element mesh generator with built-in pre- and post-processing facilities
- A continuum‐to‐atomistic bridging domain method for composite lattices
- A Green's function approach to deriving non‐reflecting boundary conditions in molecular dynamics simulations
- On molecular modelling and continuum concepts
This page was built for publication: Comparison of several staggered atomistic-to-continuum concurrent coupling strategies