Normal contact with high order finite elements and a fictitious contact material
DOI10.1016/J.CAMWA.2015.04.020zbMATH Open1443.74240OpenAlexW241398618WikidataQ120501823 ScholiaQ120501823MaRDI QIDQ2006444FDOQ2006444
Authors: Tino Bog, N. Zander, S. Kollmannsberger, Ernst Rank
Publication date: 11 October 2020
Published in: Computers & Mathematics with Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.camwa.2015.04.020
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high-order finite elementscontact mechanicsfinite cell methodfrictionless contactHertzian contactdomain contact
Finite element, Rayleigh-Ritz and Galerkin methods for boundary value problems involving PDEs (65N30) Contact in solid mechanics (74M15)
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Cited In (18)
- A novel face-on-face contact method for nonlinear solid mechanics
- A contact formulation based on a volumetric potential: application to isogeometric simulations of atrioventricular valves
- Computational design of metamaterials with self contact
- Isogeometric frictionless contact analysis with the third medium method
- Internal contact modeling for finite strain topology optimization
- Third medium finite element contact formulation for pneumatically actuated systems
- Parallelization of the multi-level \(hp\)-adaptive finite cell method
- Adaptive Quadrature and Remeshing Strategies for the Finite Cell Method at Large Deformations
- Surface penalization of self-interpenetration in linear and nonlinear elasticity
- Dual weighted residual error estimation for the finite cell method
- The Finite Cell Method for Simulation of Additive Manufacturing
- Error Control and Adaptivity for the Finite Cell Method
- A Review of Nonlocality in Computational Contact Mechanics
- Incorporation of contact for high-order finite elements in covariant form
- Space-Time Discretized Retarded Potential Boundary Integral Operators: Quadrature for Collocation Methods
- A finite element formulation of non-smooth contact based on oriented volumes for quadrilateral and hexahedral elements
- Dynamic modeling of flexible multibody systems with complex geometry via finite cell method of absolute nodal coordinate formulation
- Numerical Investigation of High-Order Solid Finite Elements for Anisotropic Finite Strain Problems
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