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Journal ArticleDOI

On a stress resultant geometrically exact shell model. Part IV: variable thickness shells with through-the-thickness stretching

Juan C. Simo, +2 more
- 01 Jul 1990 - 
- Vol. 81, Iss: 1, pp 91-126
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TLDR
In this paper, an extension of the shell theory and numerical analysis presented in Part I, II and III to include finite thickness stretch and initial variable thickness is presented, which plays a significant role in problems involving finite membrane strains, contact, concentrated surface loads and delamination (in composite shells).
Abstract
This paper in concerned with the extension of the shell theory and numerical analysis presented in Part I, II and III to include finite thickness stretch and initial variable thickness. These effects play a significant role in problems involving finite membrane strains, contact, concentrated surface loads and delamination (in composite shells). We show that a direct numerical implementation of the standard single extensible director shell model circumvents the need for rotational updates, but exhibits numerical ill-conditioning in the thin shell limit. A modified formulation obtained via a multiplicative split of the director field into an extensible and inextensible part is presented, which involves only a trivial modification of the weak form of the equilibrium equations considered in Part III, and leads to a perfectly well-conditioned formulation in the thin-shell limit. In sharp contrast with previous attempts in the context of the degenerated solid approach, the thickness stretch is an independent field, not a dependent variable updated iteratively via the plane stress condition. With regard to numerical implementation, an exact update procedure which automatically ensures that the thickness stretch remains positive is presented. For the present theory, standard displacement models would exhibit ‘locking’ in the incompressible limit as a result of the essentially three-dimensional character of the constitutive equations. A mixed formulation is described which circumvents this difficulty. Numerical examples are presented that illustrate the effects of the thickness stretch, the performance of the proposed mixed interpolation, and the well-conditioned response exhibited by the present approach in the thin-shell (inextensible director) limit.

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BookDOI

Non-Linear Finite Element Analysis of Solids and Structures: de Borst/Non-Linear Finite Element Analysis of Solids and Structures

TL;DR: De Borst et al. as mentioned in this paper present a condensed version of the original book with a focus on non-linear finite element technology, including nonlinear solution strategies, computational plasticity, damage mechanics, time-dependent effects, hyperelasticity and large-strain elasto-plasticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subdivision surfaces: a new paradigm for thin-shell finite-element analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a new paradigm for thin-shell finite-element analysis based on the use of subdivision surfaces for describing the geometry of the shell in its undeformed configuration, and generating smooth interpolated displacement fields possessing bounded energy within the strict framework of the Kirchhoff-love theory of thin shells.
Book

Lectures on Mechanics

TL;DR: The use of geometric methods in classical mechanics has proven fruitful, with wide applications in physics and engineering as mentioned in this paper, and the main points he covers are: the stability of relative equilibria, which is analyzed using the block diagonalization technique; geometric phases, studied using the reduction and reconstruction technique; and bifurcation of relative equilibrium and chaos in mechanical systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-dimensional extension of non-linear shell formulation based on the enhanced assumed strain concept

TL;DR: In this article, a 7-parameter theory with a linear varying thickness stretch as an extra variable allowing also large strain effects is presented, and the authors introduce a complete 3-D constitutive law without modification.
References
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Book

The finite element method

TL;DR: In this article, the methodes are numeriques and the fonction de forme reference record created on 2005-11-18, modified on 2016-08-08.
Journal ArticleDOI

On a stress resultant geometrically exact shell model. Part III: computational aspects of the nonlinear theory

TL;DR: In this article, a configuration update procedure for the director (rotation) field is developed, which is singularity free and exact regardless the magnitude of the rotation increment, and the exact linearization of the discrete form of the equilibrium equations is derived in closed form.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quasi-incompressible finite elasticity in principal stretches. Continuum basis and numerical algorithms

TL;DR: In this paper, a closed-form expression for the tangent moduli is proposed for finite elasticity in terms of principal stretches, and the incompressible limit is enforced by a simple and effective augmented Lagrangian procedure.
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