Mean-strain eight-node hexahedron with optimized energy-sampling stabilization for large-strain deformation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2952788
DOI10.1002/nme.4907zbMath1352.74386OpenAlexW1984988356MaRDI QIDQ2952788
Publication date: 30 December 2016
Published in: International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/nme.4907
finite elementshellhyperelasticityanisotropicnearly incompressiblemean-strain hexahedronuniform strain hexahedron
Anisotropy in solid mechanics (74E10) Finite element methods applied to problems in solid mechanics (74S05) Shells (74K25) Finite element, Rayleigh-Ritz and Galerkin methods for boundary value problems involving PDEs (65N30)
Related Items
The incorporation of mesh quality in the stabilization of virtual element methods for nonlinear elasticity ⋮ A virtual element method for isotropic hyperelasticity ⋮ Highly accurate smoothed finite element methods based on simplified eight-noded hexahedron elements ⋮ A virtual element method for 3D contact problems with non-conforming meshes ⋮ Extension of the unsymmetric 8‐node hexahedral solid element <scp>US‐ATFH8</scp> to <scp>3D</scp> hyper‐elastic finite deformation analysis ⋮ Arbitrary polygon mesh for elastic and elastoplastic analysis of solids using smoothed finite element method ⋮ Efficient virtual element formulations for compressible and incompressible finite deformations ⋮ A low order 3D virtual element formulation for finite elasto-plastic deformations ⋮ Phase-field modeling of brittle fracture using an efficient virtual element scheme ⋮ A virtual element method for transversely isotropic hyperelasticity ⋮ Flexible polyhedra modeled by the virtual element method in a discrete element context ⋮ A single Gauss point continuum finite element formulation for gradient-extended damage at large deformations ⋮ A low order virtual element formulation for finite elasto-plastic deformations
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Finite element stabilization matrices - A unification approach
- Efficient implementation of quadrilaterals with high coarse-mesh accuracy
- Finite element method - The natural approach
- Design of simple low order finite elements for large strain analysis of nearly incompressible solids
- A formulation of elasticity and viscoelasticity for fibre-reinforced material at small and finite strains
- On a stress resultant geometrically exact shell model. III: Computational aspects of the nonlinear theory
- Assumed strain stabilization of the eight node hexahedral element
- A framework for residual-based stabilization of incompressible finite elasticity: stabilized formulations and \(\overline F\) methods for linear triangles and tetrahedra
- On a physically stabilized one point finite element formulation for three-dimensional finite elasto-plasticity
- \(\overline {\text B}\) and \(\overline {\text F}\) projection methods for nearly incompressible linear and nonlinear elasticity and plasticity using higher-order NURBS elements
- Stabilization of mixed tetrahedral elements at large deformations
- A solid-shell corotational element based on ANDES, ANS and EAS for geometrically nonlinear structural analysis
- Mean-strain eight-node hexahedron with stabilization by energy sampling
- Assumed-deformation gradient finite elements with nodal integration for nearly incompressible large deformation analysis
- A uniform strain hexahedron and quadrilateral with orthogonal hourglass control
- A stabilization technique to avoid hourglassing in finite elasticity
- A highly efficient enhanced assumed strain physically stabilized hexahedral element
- A uniform deformation gradient hexahedron element with artificial hourglass control
- Nonlinear Continuum Mechanics for Finite Element Analysis
- Suppression of spurious intermediate frequency modes in under-integrated elements by combined stiffness/viscous stabilization
- F‐bar‐based linear triangles and tetrahedra for finite strain analysis of nearly incompressible solids. Part I: formulation and benchmarking
- On the Equivalent of Mixed Element Formulations and the Concept of Reduced Integration in Large Deformation Problems
- The equivalent parallelogram and parallelepiped, and their application to stabilized finite elements in two and three dimensions.