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Showing papers on "Tangent stiffness matrix published in 1980"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the use of a penalty method to enforce the constraint of incompressibility in nonlinear elasticity is described and a theoretical analysis of the associated mixed method and a new equivalence theorem are seen to lead to a way to retain positive definiteness.
Abstract: This paper describes the use of a penalty method to enforce the constraint of incompressibility in nonlinear elasticity. As an example, a problem involving the use of the Newton–Raphson method in conjunction with incremental loading and a successive mesh refinement scheme is presented. It is shown that during the incremental loading phase and the Newton–Raphson refinement on a fixed mesh, all tangent stiffness matrices are positive definite for the chosen energy density and load increment. But when the mesh is refined and the solution is interpolated as a starting value on the new mesh, the tangent stiffness matrix is indefinite. A theoretical analysis of the associated mixed method and a new equivalence theorem are seen to lead to a way to retain positive definiteness. The key is the use of an equivalent tangent stiffness matrix which is the reduced Hessian matrix. The numerical example shows that both positive definiteness and the quadratic convergence rate of the Newton–Raphson method are obtained.

30 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a tangent stiffness matrix for each element is established, which can be used for static crush analysis of structural components by setting the mass matrix zero, and the modified program has the capability to analyze structures with arbitrarily large rotation.

14 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a numerical method for the analysis of three-dimensional frames loaded dynamically into the inelastic range is developed, where the elasto-plastic force-deformation behaviour at the ends of the frame members is represented by an equation which corresponds essentially to the inverse of the Ramberg-Osgood representation.

11 citations