scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1062860
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4355314
DOI<3809::AID-NME26>3.0.CO;2-2 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0207(19961130)39:22<3809::AID-NME26>3.0.CO;2-2zbMath0886.76044MaRDI QIDQ4355314
Philippe Aubert, Hormoz Modaressi
Publication date: 17 May 1998
Title: zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
stabilityvariational formulationelement-free Galerkin methodmatrix formulationweighting functioninfluence domaintwo-phase porous media
Flows in porous media; filtration; seepage (76S05) Multiphase and multicomponent flows (76T99) Finite element methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics (76M10)
Related Items
A new class ofCn interpolations and its application to the finite element method ⋮ An element-free Galerkin method for simulation of stationary two-dimensional shallow water flows in rivers ⋮ ESFLIB: A library to compute the element-free Galerkin shape functions ⋮ On parameterized block symmetric positive definite preconditioners for a class of block three-by-three saddle point problems ⋮ Convergence properties of preconditioned Hermitian and skew-Hermitian splitting methods for non-Hermitian positive semidefinite matrices ⋮ Stable element-free Galerkin solution procedures for the coupled soil-pore fluid problem
Cites Work
- Variational and projection methods for the volume constraint in finite deformation elasto-plasticity
- Generalizing the finite element method: Diffuse approximation and diffuse elements
- A new implementation of the element free Galerkin method
- Finite element derivative recovery by moving least square interpolants
- Generalization of selective integration procedures to anisotropic and nonlinear media
- An accuracy condition for consolidation by finite elements
- Incompressibility without tears—HOW to avoid restrictions of mixed formulation
- A variationally coupled FE–BE method for transient problems
- Element‐free Galerkin methods
- Finite volumes and finite elements: Two ‘good friends’
- A class of mixed assumed strain methods and the method of incompatible modes
- Static and dynamic behaviour of soils : a rational approach to quantitative solutions. I. Fully saturated problems
This page was built for publication: