A mixed-FEM formulation for nonlinear incompressible elasticity in the plane
DOI10.1002/num.1046zbMath1010.74062OpenAlexW2083281605MaRDI QIDQ2778279
Gabriel N. Gatica, Ernst Peter Stephan
Publication date: 13 May 2003
Published in: Numerical Methods for Partial Differential Equations (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/num.1046
variational formulationa posteriori error estimatesa priori error estimateshyperelasticityunique solvabilityHu-Washizu principlemixed finite element formulationBabuška-Brezzi's theoryBank-Weiser approachnonlinear incompressible materialPEERS spacetwo-fold saddle point operator equation
Nonlinear elasticity (74B20) Finite element methods applied to problems in solid mechanics (74S05) Error bounds for boundary value problems involving PDEs (65N15)
Related Items
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Coupling of finite elements and boundary elements for some nonlinear interface problems
- A family of higher order mixed finite element methods for plane elasticity
- A unified approach to a posteriori error estimation using element residual methods
- A boundary-field equation method for a nonlinear exterior elasticity problem in the plane
- A mixed finite element method for nonlinear elasticity: two-fold saddle point approach and a posteriori error estimate
- A posteriori error estimation in large-strain elasticity using equilibrated local Neumann problems
- A posteriori error control in low-order finite element discretisations of incompressible stationary flow problems
- A dual-dual mixed formulation for nonlinear exterior transmission problems
- An application of babuska-brezzi's theory to a class of variational problems
- PEERS: A new mixed finite element for plane elasticity
- Mixed and Hybrid Finite Element Methods
- Expanded mixed finite element methods for linear second-order elliptic problems, I
- Expanded mixed finite element methods for quasilinear second order elliptic problems, II
- Coupling of Mixed Finite Elements and Boundary Elements for A Hyperelastic Interface Problem
- A Dual-Dual Formulation for the Coupling of Mixed-FEM and BEM in Hyperelasticity
- Coupling of Finite and Boundary Element Methods for an Elastoplastic Interface Problem
- An expanded mixed finite element approach via a dual-dual formulation and the minimum residual method