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Showing papers by "Steven J. Plimpton published in 1996"


Proceedings Article
01 Mar 1996
TL;DR: This paper describes a new parallel algorithm for detecting contacts that uses two different parallel decompositions, a static one for the finite element analysis and dynamic one for contact detection.
Abstract: In finite-element, transient dynamics simulations, physical objects are typically modeled as Lagrangian meshes because the meshes can move and deform with the objects as they undergo stress. In many simulations, such as computations of impacts or explosions, portions of the deforming mesh come in contact with each other as the simulation progresses. These contacts must be detected and the forces they impart to the mesh must be computed at each timestep to accurately capture the physics of interest. While the finite-element portion of these computations is readily parallelized, the contact detection problem is difficult to implement efficiently on parallel computers and has been a bottleneck to achieving high performance on large parallel machines. In this paper we describe a new parallel algorithm for detecting contacts. Our approach differs from previous work in that we use two different parallel decompositions, a static one for the finite element analysis and dynamic one for contact detection. We present results for this algorithm in a parallel version of the transient dynamics code PRONTO-3D running on a large Intel Paragon.

8 citations


Patent
30 Oct 1996
TL;DR: In this paper, a process for predicting the structural performance of a mechanical system represented the mechanical system by a plurality of surface elements is presented. The surface elements are grouped according to their location in the volume occupied by the mechanical systems so that contacts between surface elements can be efficiently located.
Abstract: A process for predicting the structural performance of a mechanical system represents the mechanical system by a plurality of surface elements. The surface elements are grouped according to their location in the volume occupied by the mechanical system so that contacts between surface elements can be efficiently located. The process is well suited for efficient practice on multiprocessor computers.

6 citations