Amplitude incremental method: a novel approach to capture stable and unstable solutions of harmonically excited vibration response of functionally graded beams under large amplitude motion
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2296064
DOI10.1515/ijnsns-2018-0235OpenAlexW2936753730MaRDI QIDQ2296064
Brajesh Panigrahi, Goutam Pohit
Publication date: 17 February 2020
Published in: International Journal of Nonlinear Sciences and Numerical Simulation (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1515/ijnsns-2018-0235
harmonic balance methodTimoshenko beam theorynon-linear vibrationamplitude incremental techniqueFGM beams
Cites Work
- A new beam finite element for the analysis of functionally graded materials.
- A new hyperbolic shear deformation theory for bending and free vibration analysis of isotropic, functionally graded, sandwich and laminated composite plates
- Study of non-linear dynamic behavior of open cracked functionally graded Timoshenko beam under forced excitation using harmonic balance method in conjunction with an iterative technique
- Incremental Harmonic Balance Method With Multiple Time Scales for Aperiodic Vibration of Nonlinear Systems
- STRUCTURAL SIMILITUDE AND SCALING LAWS OF ANTI-SYMMETRIC CROSS-PLY LAMINATED CYLINDRICAL SHELLS FOR BUCKLING AND VIBRATION EXPERIMENTS
- FORCED VIBRATION OF TWO BEAMS JOINED WITH A NON-LINEAR ROTATIONAL JOINT: CLAMPED AND SIMPLY SUPPORTED END CONDITIONS
- Amplitude Incremental Variational Principle for Nonlinear Vibration of Elastic Systems
- THE RESPONSE OF A NONLINEAR SYSTEM WITH A NONSEMISIMPLE ONE-TO-ONE RESONANCE TO A COMBINATION PARAMETRIC RESONANCE
- Nonlinear Vibrations of a Beam Under Harmonic Excitation
- A multiple degree-of-freedom approach to nonlinear beam vibrations
- Nonlinear Vibrations of a Buckled Beam Under Harmonic Excitation
This page was built for publication: Amplitude incremental method: a novel approach to capture stable and unstable solutions of harmonically excited vibration response of functionally graded beams under large amplitude motion