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Journal ArticleDOI

Partitioned analysis of coupled mechanical systems

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TLDR
This is a tutorial article that reviews the use of partitioned analysis procedures for the analysis of coupled dynamical systems using the partitioned solution approach for multilevel decomposition aimed at massively parallel computation.
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This article is published in Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering.The article was published on 2001-03-02. It has received 806 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Dynamical systems theory & State variable.

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Book ChapterDOI

A Review on Fast Quasi-Newton and Accelerated Fixed-Point Iterations for Partitioned Fluid–Structure Interaction Simulation

TL;DR: This chapter presents a review on combinations of iteration patterns (parallel and staggered) and of quasi-Newton methods and compares their suitability in terms of convergence speed, robustness, and parallel scalability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Micromechanical Modeling and Numerical Simulation of Chain-Mail Armor

TL;DR: In this article, a network-type model of chain-mail (CM) armor is formulated, where the links are modeled as supporting only axial (tensile) loading, and the interconnections are idealized as three-dimensional frictionless pin-joints.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical implementation and solution strategies for a thermo-elastoplastic-viscoplastic model for cohesive soils

TL;DR: In this paper, a generalized bounding surface model for saturated cohesive soils is proposed to account for time-dependent properties of saturated soils, including thermal coupling and inelastic properties of soils.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of landslides employing a space–time single-phase level-set method

TL;DR: In this article, a single phase transition from a solid-like behavior to a fluid-like one is characterized by a phase transition, where the material is moving through space special discretization techniques are required.
Journal ArticleDOI

Virtual pantograph-catenary environment for control development based on a co-simulation approach

TL;DR: In this paper , a co-simulation environment in which a multibody dynamics code is simulated concurrently with a finite element code is presented and demonstrated, where different paradigms for the development of mechatronic pantographs can be tested.
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.

Difference methods for initial-value problems

TL;DR: In this article, differentielles and stabilite were used for differentiable transport in the context of transfert de chaleur and ondes Reference Record created on 2005-11-18, modified on 2016-08-08
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