On penalty function methods in the finite-element analysis of flow problems

From MaRDI portal
Publication:3942559

DOI10.1002/fld.1650020204zbMath0483.76008OpenAlexW2096763416MaRDI QIDQ3942559

J. N. Reddy

Publication date: 1982

Published in: International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/fld.1650020204




Related Items (23)

REDUCED BASISA POSTERIORIERROR BOUNDS FOR THE STOKES EQUATIONS IN PARAMETRIZED DOMAINS: A PENALTY APPROACHSimple continuous pressure elements for two- and three-dimensional incompressible flowsAutomatic adaptive mesh upgrade schemes of the step-by-step incremental simulation for quasi-linear viscoplastic granular materialsA mixed shear flexible finite element for the analysis of laminated platesMultigrid methods to accelerate convergence of element-by-element solution algorithms for viscous incompressible flowsAn FFT‐based Galerkin method for the effective permeability of porous materialA fast and robust fictitious domain method for modelling viscous flows in complex mixers: The example of propellant make-downTime stepping for vectorial operator splittingPenalty-finite-element analysis of 3-D Navier-Stokes equationsPenalty finite element analysis of incompressible flows using element by element solution algorithmsProperties of singnorini's problem solution with perturbation of unknown boundary and application to contact problemsThe compaction of blended aggregates of non-spherical linear viscous particlesHigher order isoparametric finite element solution of Stokes flowFinite element analysis of viscous fluid flowA Matrix Free Fractional Step Method for Static and Dynamic Incompressible Solid MechanicsVariational and projection methods for the volume constraint in finite deformation elasto-plasticityObtaining error estimates for optimally constrained incompressible finite elementsPenalty finite element method for the Navier-Stokes equationsKrylov-based Uzawa algorithms for the solution of the Stokes equations using discontinuous-pressure tetrahedral finite elementsNumerical modelling of subcritical open channel flow using the k- \(\epsilon\) turbulence model and the penalty function finite element techniqueFinite elements and object-oriented implementation techniques in computational fluid dynamicsUnnamed ItemA perturbed Lagrangian formulation for the finite element solution of contact problems



Cites Work


This page was built for publication: On penalty function methods in the finite-element analysis of flow problems