Application of the boundary element method to rubber-like elasticity
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1816767
DOI10.1016/0307-904X(96)00046-7zbMath0858.73077MaRDI QIDQ1816767
Nicholas J. Altiero, Husain Jubran Al-Gahtani
Publication date: 1 April 1997
Published in: Applied Mathematical Modelling (Search for Journal in Brave)
plane strain problemincompressible materialcentral holecomputer codeincremental-iterative proceduresquare rubber-sheetthick-walled cylindrical pressure vessel
Nonlinear elasticity (74B20) Boundary element methods applied to problems in solid mechanics (74S15)
Related Items
An extension of Herrmann's principle to nonlinear elasticity ⋮ A meshless local Petrov-Galerkin method for large deformation contact analysis of elastomers ⋮ Numerical modelling of elastomers using the boundary element method ⋮ DRM-MFS for two-dimensional finite elasticity ⋮ Coupling BEM and the Local Point Interpolation for the Solution of Anisotropic Elastic Nonlinear, Multi-Physics and Multi-Fields Problems
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Boundary element method for finite elasticity
- Large strain analysis of rubber-like materials based on a perturbed Lagrangian variational principle
- A finite element displacement model valid for any value of the compressibility
- Recent developments in the field-boundary element method for finite/small strain elastoplasticity
- A step-wise variational approach to elastic-plastic analysis by boundary/interior elements
- Solving the elastoplastic unloading problems of an axisymmetric body with actual material hardening models by BEM
- Numerical solutions of nonlinear problems of continua—II. Survey of incompressibility constraints and software aspects
- A finite element formulation for nonlinear incompressible elastic and inelastic analysis
- Rubber-like elasticity by boundary element method: Finite deformation of a circular elastic slice
- Finite Elasticity Solutions Using Hybrid Finite Elements Based on a Complementary Energy Principle—Part 2: Incompressible Materials