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A new hybrid explicit/implicit in-plane-out-of-plane separated representation for the solution of dynamic problems defined in plate-like domains

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A new efficient hybrid explicit/implicit in-plane-out-of-plane separated representation for dynamic problems defined in plate-like domains that allows computing 3D solutions with the stability constraint exclusively determined by the coarser in-planes discretization.
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This article is published in Computers & Structures.The article was published on 2018-11-01 and is currently open access. It has received 6 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Discretization & Dynamic problem.

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Exploring space separation techniques for 3D elastic waves simulations

TL;DR: In this article , the 3D elastic wave simulations are decomposed into a sequence of lower dimensional problems with the Proper Generalized Decomposition (PGD) and the spatial discretization is performed with the Spectral Element Method (SEM) to provide more compact separated representations compared to the ones obtained with a finite element discretisation.
References
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Book

Finite Element Procedures

TL;DR: The Finite Element Method as mentioned in this paper is a method for linear analysis in solid and structural mechanics, and it has been used in many applications, such as heat transfer, field problems, and Incompressible Fluid Flows.
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A new family of solvers for some classes of multidimensional partial differential equations encountered in kinetic theory modeling of complex fluids

TL;DR: This work states thatKinetic theory models involving the Fokker-Planck equation can be accurately discretized using a mesh support using a reduced approximation basis within an adaptive procedure making use of an efficient separation of variables.
Book

The Proper Generalized Decomposition for Advanced Numerical Simulations: A Primer

TL;DR: The present text is the first available book describing the Proper Generalized Decomposition (PGD), and provides a very readable and practical introduction that allows the reader to quickly grasp the main features of the method.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new family of solvers for some classes of multidimensional partial differential equations encountered in kinetic theory modelling of complex fluids - Part II: Transient simulation using space-time separated representations

TL;DR: This work presents a new family of solvers for some classes of multidimensional partial differential equations encountered in kinetic theory modeling of complex fluids using separated representations and tensor product approximations basis for treating transient models.
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Q1. What have the authors contributed in "A new hybrid explicit/implicit in-plane-out-of-plane separated representation for the solution of dynamic problems defined in plate-like domains" ?

In this paper the authors introduce a new efficient hybrid explicit/implicit in-plane-out-ofplane separated representation for dynamic problems defined in plate-like domains that allows computing 3D solutions with the stability constraint exclusively determined by the coarser in-plane discretization. 

In this paper the authors circumvent such a drawback by using an implicit ( unconditionally stable ) through-the-thickness discretization whereas a standard explicit scheme is considered for treating the in-plane operators. 

The main handicap of explicit simulations is that the time step must verify the stability condition, decreasing with the element size. 

The last analysis aims at taking advantage of the superior stability performances of the implicit formulation, that a priori can use larger time-steps that the ones of explicit and hybrid formulations that are only conditionally stables. 

When dynamics applies on degenerated domains, like plates or shells, and no acceptable simplifying hypotheses are available for reducing their complexity to 2D, fully 3D solutions seem compulsory. 

This paper proposes a new time discretization scheme for solving 3D dynamical problems defined in degenerated domains, that is, domains in which one of its characteristic dimensions is much smaller that the other ones, as it is the case when considering plates or shells. 

As discussed in the previous section, with X having one dimension (the one related to the thickness) much smaller than the others involving the in-plane coordinates, an in-plane-out-ofplane separated representation seems again the most appealing route for addressing 3D discretizations while keeping the computational complexity the one characteristic of 2D discretizations. 

In many structural analysis and simulation of forming processes dynamical aspects cannot be neglected and then elastic models are replaced by their elastodynamics counterparts. 

In fact the mesh employed for discretizing the out-of-plane dimension (thickness) determines the limit time-step ensuring stability, and consequently it could become quickly unaffordable when refining the out-of-plane discretization. 

In plane-out-of-plane separated representations, revisited in the next section, allows reducing the 3D solution to a sequence of 2D (in-plane) and 1D (along the thickness) problems, as proved when considering elastostatics in plate and shell domains [5,6]. 

On the contrary explicit schemes do not require iteration as the nodal accelerations are solved directly, and from which velocities and displacements are calculated by simple integration. 

This was the route employed for deriving beam, plate and shell theories in solid mechanics, that were extended later to many other physics, like flows in narrow gaps, thermal or electromagnetic problems in laminates, among many others. 

For each mesh the authors compare the computing time employed by both the hybrid and the fully implicit PGD discretizations to solve the problem in the time interval ½0;400Dt , with the time-step Dt ¼ 10 53 s for all the simulations. 

the authors perform a comparison between the three PGD formulations (explicit, hybrid and implicit) in the time interval ½0;400Dt , with Dt ¼ 10 7 s to ensure the stability of the explicit time integration.