Finite element analysis of compressible transversely isotropic hyperelastic shells
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6098729
DOI10.1007/s00707-023-03536-zzbMath1526.74064OpenAlexW4362558344MaRDI QIDQ6098729
Publication date: 14 June 2023
Published in: Acta Mechanica (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00707-023-03536-z
virtual work principlemembrane lockingtransverse shear lockingdisplacement approximation12-parameter finite shell elementcurvature-displacement locking
Nonlinear elasticity (74B20) Finite element methods applied to problems in solid mechanics (74S05) Shells (74K25)
Cites Work
- Incompressibility at large strains and finite element implementation
- Continuum theory of the mechanics of fibre-reinforced composites. (Lectures given at the International Centre for Mechanical Sciences in Udine, Italy, July 1981)
- Analysis of thin shells using anisotropic polyconvex energy densities
- Theory and numerical analysis of shells undergoing large elastic strains
- Polyconvexity of generalized polynomial-type hyperelastic strain energy functions for near-incompressibility.
- Analysis, finite element computation and error estimation in transversely isotropic nearly incompressible finite elasticity
- Novel quadrilateral elements based on explicit Hermite polynomials for bending of Kirchhoff-Love plates
- A mixed higher order FEM for fully coupled compressible transversely isotropic finite hyperelasticity
- A novel computational formulation for nearly incompressible and nearly inextensible finite hyperelasticity
- A simple orthotropic, transversely isotropic hyperelastic constitutive equation for large strain computations
- Nonlinear higher-order shell theory for incompressible biological hyperelastic materials
- A 3-field formulation for strongly transversely isotropic compressible finite hyperelasticity
- A novel mixed finite element for finite anisotropic elasticity: the SKA-element simplified kinematics for anisotropy
- A 4-node finite shell element for the implementation of general hyperelastic 3D-elasticity at finite strains
- Extension of the ?solid-shell? concept for application to large elastic and large elastoplastic deformations
- A shell element for finite strain analyses: hyperelastic material models
- Three‐dimensional extension of non‐linear shell formulation based on the enhanced assumed strain concept
- An assumed strain approach avoiding artificial thickness straining for a non‐linear 4‐node shell element
- Finite element analysis of hyperelastic thin shells with large strains