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Journal ArticleDOI

The superconvergent patch recovery and a posteriori error estimates. Part 1: The recovery technique

O. C. Zienkiewicz, +1 more
- 30 May 1992 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 7, pp 1331-1364
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TLDR
In this article, a general recovery technique is developed for determining the derivatives (stresses) of the finite element solutions at nodes, which has been tested for a group of widely used linear, quadratic and cubic elements for both one and two dimensional problems.
Abstract
This is the first of two papers concerning superconvergent recovery techniques and a posteriori error estimation. In this paper, a general recovery technique is developed for determining the derivatives (stresses) of the finite element solutions at nodes. The implementation of the recovery technique is simple and cost effective. The technique has been tested for a group of widely used linear, quadratic and cubic elements for both one and two dimensional problems. Numerical experiments demonstrate that the recovered nodal values of the derivatives with linear and cubic elements are superconvergent. One order higher accuracy is achieved by the procedure with linear and cubic elements but two order higher accuracy is achieved for the derivatives with quadratic elements. In particular, an O(h4) convergence of the nodal values of the derivatives for a quadratic triangular element is reported for the first time. The performance of the proposed technique is compared with the widely used smoothing procedure of global L2 projection and other methods. It is found that the derivatives recovered at interelement nodes, by using L2 projection, are also superconvergent for linear elements but not for quadratic elements. Numerical experiments on the convergence of the recovered solutions in the energy norm are also presented. Higher rates of convergence are again observed. The results presented in this part of the paper indicate clearly that a new, powerful and economical process is now available which should supersede the currently used post-processing procedures applied in most codes.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A multiscale framework for characterization and modeling ductile fracture in heterogeneous aluminum alloys

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed three components contributing to the overall framework of multiscale modeling of ductile fracture in aluminum alloys: morphology-based domain partitioning (MDP), detailed micromechanical analysis of particle fragmentation and matrix cracking of heterogeneous microstructures, and a locally enriched VCFEM or LE-VCFEM is developed to incorporate ductile failure through matrix cracking in the form of void growth and coalescence using nonlocal Gurson-Tvergaard-Needleman (GTN) model.
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Polynomial representations for patch recovery procedures

TL;DR: In this paper, a technique of constructing a local polynomial representation for the unknown function of a boundary value problem and the corresponding derivative quantities of interest, which contain built-in information from the field equations, is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimum aerodynamic shape design for fluid flow problems including mesh adaptivity

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a methodology for shape optimization problems in the context of fluid flow problems including adaptive remeshing based on the computation of the sensitivities of the geometrical design parameters, the mesh, the flow variables and the error estimator to project the refinement parameters from one design to the next.
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An Adaptive Remeshing Strategy for Free-Surface Fluid Flow Problems. Part I: The Axisymmetric Case

TL;DR: In this article, an anisotropic adaptive remeshing strategy is used for the numerical simulation of free surface fluid flow problems with surface tension, where Carreau and power law models are used for shear-thinning viscosity effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient and accurate stress recovery procedure and a posteriori error estimator for the stable generalized/extended finite element method

TL;DR: The proposed stress recovery technique is used to define a Zienkiewicz‐Zhu a posteriori error estimator for the G/XFEM and the SGFEM, and the accuracy, computational cost, and convergence rate of recovered stresses together with the quality of the ZZ estimator, including its effectivity index are demonstrated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A simple error estimator and adaptive procedure for practical engineerng analysis

TL;DR: A new error estimator is presented which is not only reasonably accurate but whose evaluation is computationally so simple that it can be readily implemented in existing finite element codes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Local and global smoothing of discontinuous finite element functions using a least squares method

TL;DR: In this article, the concepts and potential advantages of local and global least squares smoothing of discontinuous finite element functions are introduced, and the relationship between local smoothing and the reduced integration technique is established.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal stress locations in finite element models

TL;DR: In this paper, the existence of optimal points for calculating accurate stresses within finite element models is discussed and a method for locating such points is proposed and applied to several popular finite elements.
Journal ArticleDOI

The post-processing approach in the finite element method—part 1: Calculation of displacements, stresses and other higher derivatives of the displacements

TL;DR: In this article, a method for post-processing a finite element solution to obtain high accuracy approximations for displacements, stresses, stress intensity factors, etc. is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Higher order local accuracy by averaging in the finite element method

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the class of finite element subspaces and explain the main result on the accuracy of K h * u h, where K h is a fixed function, u h represents local averages, and * denotes convolution.
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