A stabilised displacement-volumetric strain formulation for nearly incompressible and anisotropic materials
DOI10.1016/j.cma.2021.113701zbMath1506.74079OpenAlexW3132613495MaRDI QIDQ2021971
R. Zorrilla, Ramon Codina, Riccardo Rossi
Publication date: 27 April 2021
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.2021.113701
finite elementsmixed formulationanisotropicnearly incompressible materialsvolumetric strainvariational multiscales
Anisotropy in solid mechanics (74E10) Finite element methods applied to problems in solid mechanics (74S05) Finite element, Rayleigh-Ritz and Galerkin methods for boundary value problems involving PDEs (65N30)
Related Items (2)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Explicit mixed strain-displacement finite elements for compressible and quasi-incompressible elasticity and plasticity
- Subscales on the element boundaries in the variational two-scale finite element method
- Mixed stabilized finite element methods in nonlinear solid mechanics. I: Formulation
- The variational multiscale method -- a paradigm for computational mechanics
- The incompressible limit in linear anisotropic elasticity, with applications to surface waves and elastostatics
- A mixed three-field FE formulation for stress accurate analysis including the incompressible limit
- Stabilization of incompressibility and convection through orthogonal sub-scales in finite element methods
- A stabilized formulation for incompressible elasticity using linear displacement and pressure interpolations.
- An object-oriented environment for developing finite element codes for multi-disciplinary applications
- Explicit mixed strain-displacement finite element for dynamic geometrically non-linear solid mechanics
- Variational multiscale error estimators for solid mechanics adaptive simulations: an orthogonal subgrid scale approach
- Migration of a generic multi-physics framework to HPC environments
- Analysis of a stabilized finite element approximation of the Oseen equations using orthogonal subscales
- The linear elasticity tensor of incompressible materials
- F‐bar‐based linear triangles and tetrahedra for finite strain analysis of nearly incompressible solids. Part I: formulation and benchmarking
This page was built for publication: A stabilised displacement-volumetric strain formulation for nearly incompressible and anisotropic materials