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Direct stiffness method

About: Direct stiffness method is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2584 publications have been published within this topic receiving 53131 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Based on the governing equations of the thermo-elastic problem, the analytical layer-elements of a finite layer and an underlying half-space are obtained using the Laplace-Hankel transform and the characteristic value method.

16 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a finite element formulation that preserves the symmetric and banded stiffness matrix characteristics for the fractional diffusion equation is proposed, where the stiffness part of the present formulation is identical to its counterpart of the finite element method for the conventional diffusion equation and thus the stiffness matrix formulation becomes trivial.
Abstract: Due to the nonlocal property of the fractional derivative, the finite element analysis of fractional diffusion equation often leads to a dense and non-symmetric stiffness matrix, in contrast to the conventional finite element formulation with a particularly desirable symmetric and banded stiffness matrix structure for the typical diffusion equation. This work first proposes a finite element formulation that preserves the symmetry and banded stiffness matrix characteristics for the fractional diffusion equation. The key point of the proposed formulation is the symmetric weak form construction through introducing a fractional weight function. It turns out that the stiffness part of the present formulation is identical to its counterpart of the finite element method for the conventional diffusion equation and thus the stiffness matrix formulation becomes trivial. Meanwhile, the fractional derivative effect in the discrete formulation is completely transferred to the force vector, which is obviously much easier and efficient to compute than the dense fractional derivative stiffness matrix. Subsequently, it is further shown that for the general fractional advection---diffusion---reaction equation, the symmetric and banded structure can also be maintained for the diffusion stiffness matrix, although the total stiffness matrix is not symmetric in this case. More importantly, it is demonstrated that under certain conditions this symmetric diffusion stiffness matrix formulation is capable of producing very favorable numerical solutions in comparison with the conventional non-symmetric diffusion stiffness matrix finite element formulation. The effectiveness of the proposed methodology is illustrated through a series of numerical examples.

16 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a reduced-order stiffness evaluation procedure (E-STEP) is proposed for non-linear structural finite element systems, where the stiffness evaluation is carried out element-by-element in the full domain.
Abstract: In most non-linear analyses, the construction of a system matrix uses a large amount of computation time, comparable to the computation time required by the solving process. If the process for computing non-linear internal force matrices is substituted with an effective equivalent model that enables the bypass of numerical integrations and assembly processes used in matrix construction, efficiency can be greatly enhanced. A stiffness evaluation procedure (STEP) establishes non-linear internal force models using polynomial formulations of displacements. To efficiently identify an equivalent model, the method has evolved such that it is based on a reduced-order system. The reduction process, however, makes the equivalent model difficult to parameterize, which significantly affects the efficiency of the optimization process. In this paper, therefore, a new STEP, E-STEP, is proposed. Based on the element-wise nature of the finite element model, the stiffness evaluation is carried out element-by-element in the full domain. Since the unit of computation for the stiffness evaluation is restricted by element size, and since the computation is independent, the equivalent model can be constructed efficiently in parallel, even in the full domain. Due to the element-wise nature of the construction procedure, the equivalent E-STEP model is easily characterized by design parameters. Various reduced-order modeling techniques can be applied to the equivalent system in a manner similar to how they are applied in the original system. The reduced-order model based on E-STEP is successfully demonstrated for the dynamic analyses of non-linear structural finite element systems under varying design parameters.

16 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the stiffness matrix of a 4-nodes isoparametric element for FEM analysis is evaluated by using the symbolic mathematics system, and the results are compared with those by the numerical integration.
Abstract: The stiffness matrix of a 4-nodes isoparametric element for FEM analysis is evaluated by using the symbolic mathematics system. The results are compared with those by the numerical integration. It is shown that the stiffness matrix by the symbolic manipulation gives accurate results, though the results by the numerical integration have some numerical error.

16 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the stiffness and joint load matrices for a beam-column finite element resting on a Winkler-type elastic foundation are derived from the solution of the governing differential equation, where the degrees of freedom at the nodes are lateral displacement and flexural rotation.

16 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202334
202270
202123
202022
201930
201842