A COMBINED EXTENDED AND EDGE-BASED SMOOTHED FINITE ELEMENT METHOD (ES-XFEM) FOR FRACTURE ANALYSIS OF 2D ELASTICITY
DOI10.1142/S0219876211002812zbMath1245.74081OpenAlexW2060048445MaRDI QIDQ2905158
Kai-Yang Zeng, Lei Chen, Gui-Rong Liu
Publication date: 24 August 2012
Published in: International Journal of Computational Methods (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1142/s0219876211002812
numerical methodconvergence ratestress intensity factorextended finite element methodfracture analysisedge-based smoothed finite element method
Classical linear elasticity (74B05) Brittle fracture (74R10) 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 (11)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- A smoothed finite element method for mechanics problems
- Modeling quasi-static crack growth with the extended finite element method. I: Computer implementation
- A singular edge-based smoothed finite element method (ES-FEM) for bimaterial interface cracks
- A novel singular node-based smoothed finite element method (NS-FEM) for upper bound solutions of fracture problems
- Stabilized conforming nodal integration in the natural-element method
- A GENERALIZED GRADIENT SMOOTHING TECHNIQUE AND THE SMOOTHED BILINEAR FORM FOR GALERKIN FORMULATION OF A WIDE CLASS OF COMPUTATIONAL METHODS
- Improving the accuracy of XFEM crack tip fields using higher order quadrature and statically admissible stress recovery
- A corrected XFEM approximation without problems in blending elements
- Upper bound solution to elasticity problems: A unique property of the linearly conforming point interpolation method (LC-PIM)
- THE PARTITION OF UNITY METHOD
- On the construction of blending elements for local partition of unity enriched finite elements
- A finite element method for crack growth without remeshing
- High-order extended finite element method for cracked domains
This page was built for publication: A COMBINED EXTENDED AND EDGE-BASED SMOOTHED FINITE ELEMENT METHOD (ES-XFEM) FOR FRACTURE ANALYSIS OF 2D ELASTICITY