2019
DOI: 10.1007/s00466-019-01689-0
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A concise frictional contact formulation based on surface potentials and isogeometric discretization

Abstract: This work presents a concise theoretical and computational framework for the finite element formulation of frictional contact problems with arbitrarily large deformation and sliding. The aim of this work is to extend the contact theory based on surface potentials (Sauer and De Lorenzis, 2013) to account for friction. Coulomb friction under isothermal conditions is considered here. For a consistent friction formulation, we start with the first and second laws of thermodynamics and derive the governing equations… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The resulting equations are discretized within a finite element framework to obtain a numerical solution, which is briefly summarized in Appendix A. The readers are referred to Duong and Sauer [18] and Sauer and De Lorenzis [46,47] for a more detailed derivation of the considered contact formulation.…”
Section: Models and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…The resulting equations are discretized within a finite element framework to obtain a numerical solution, which is briefly summarized in Appendix A. The readers are referred to Duong and Sauer [18] and Sauer and De Lorenzis [46,47] for a more detailed derivation of the considered contact formulation.…”
Section: Models and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Figure 11: Frictional contact kinematics at current time t n+1 : current slave point x k , current position of the previous interacting point x (ξ n ), current interacting point x (ξ), the current elastic gap vector g e and its components, previous elastic gap g n e , and the sliding path C. Adopted and modified from Ref. [18].…”
Section: A2 Contact Kinematics and Contact Tractionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Apart from the tangential sticking constraint ξ · p α = 0 , there is also the normal contact constraint g n 0 . Normal and tangential contact are usually treated separately in most friction algorithms, but there are also unified approaches directly based on the gap vector g , see, e.g., [70, 71]. Such an approach is also taken in the following sections.…”
Section: Continuum Contact Kinematicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…where the later is associated with dissipative (sliding) contact and hence denoted g s . It is noted that both g e and g s have normal and tangential components as in the unified contact formulations of Wriggers and Haraldsson (2003) and Duong and Sauer (2019).…”
Section: Continuum Contact Kinematicsmentioning
confidence: 99%