2004
DOI: 10.1115/1.1760517
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

The Finite Element Analysis of Shells: Fundamentals

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1

Citation Types

0
63
0
3

Year Published

2004
2004
2016
2016

Publication Types

Select...
5

Relationship

0
5

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 33 publications
(66 citation statements)
references
References 0 publications
0
63
0
3
Order By: Relevance
“…The first one is characteristic of common metal plasticity models, where plastic deformation is taken to be isochoric or, in other words, incompressible [19]. The second one comes from the analysis of thin shells, were the limit between ''thick'' and ''thin'' geometries is somewhat difficult to establish, with the occurrence of locking not only strictly relying on thickness/length ratios, as demonstrated by Chapelle, Bathe and co-workers [11,12,29,30,31].In order to circumvent these parasitic phenomena, selective reduced integration (or, equivalently, u/p formulation, mean-dilatation technique and B-bar methods) -for volumetric locking -and the ''mixed interpolation of tensorial components''/assumed strain method -for transverse shear locking -had arisen as possible and successful techniques. In the literature see, for instance, references [4,45,53,54,61,68,69,74,85,86,96] for the grounds of computational treatment of incompressibility, in elastic and elastoplastic finite element cases, and also [9,38,56,67] for earlier works dealing with transverse shear locking.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The first one is characteristic of common metal plasticity models, where plastic deformation is taken to be isochoric or, in other words, incompressible [19]. The second one comes from the analysis of thin shells, were the limit between ''thick'' and ''thin'' geometries is somewhat difficult to establish, with the occurrence of locking not only strictly relying on thickness/length ratios, as demonstrated by Chapelle, Bathe and co-workers [11,12,29,30,31].In order to circumvent these parasitic phenomena, selective reduced integration (or, equivalently, u/p formulation, mean-dilatation technique and B-bar methods) -for volumetric locking -and the ''mixed interpolation of tensorial components''/assumed strain method -for transverse shear locking -had arisen as possible and successful techniques. In the literature see, for instance, references [4,45,53,54,61,68,69,74,85,86,96] for the grounds of computational treatment of incompressibility, in elastic and elastoplastic finite element cases, and also [9,38,56,67] for earlier works dealing with transverse shear locking.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The first one is characteristic of common metal plasticity models, where plastic deformation is taken to be isochoric or, in other words, incompressible [19]. The second one comes from the analysis of thin shells, were the limit between ''thick'' and ''thin'' geometries is somewhat difficult to establish, with the occurrence of locking not only strictly relying on thickness/length ratios, as demonstrated by Chapelle, Bathe and co-workers [11,12,29,30,31].…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…When the shell is not inhibited, bending displacements are not described sufficiently accurately when the relative thickness ε is small [7,8,20] and the bending displacement is underestimated. Such phenomena also occur in the layers.…”
Section: The Numerical Procedures Of Resolution Using Anisotropic Adapmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 The problem is sensitive and a pathological behaviour emerges progressively as ε tends towards zero. The solution of the limit problem is not contained anymore in the distribution space or in any Sobolev space, 4 and we have a complexification phenomenon: large oscillations corresponding to a new kind of instability appear on the free boundary [1,7,21].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They can be directly applied to analysis of conforming finite elements [2,5,9,10], making many standard techniques of numerical analysis usable to shells. Such conforming methods, however, have not satisfactorily resolved the locking problem in shell computations, which severely undermines the accuracy of numerical solutions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%