Pages that link to "Item:Q695967"
From MaRDI portal
The following pages link to A finite element approach coupling a continuous gradient damage model and a cohesive zone model within the framework of quasi-brittle failure (Q695967):
Displaying 31 items.
- On the fracture models determined by the continuum-strong discontinuity approach (Q712335) (← links)
- Towards fully automatic modelling of the fracture process in quasi-brittle and ductile materials: a unified crack growth criterion (Q943127) (← links)
- Combination of fracture and damage mechanics for numerical failure analysis (Q1297539) (← links)
- A combined XFEM-damage mechanics approach for concrete crack propagation (Q1667489) (← links)
- Elastic damage to crack transition in a coupled non-local implicit discontinuous Galerkin/extrinsic cohesive law framework (Q1668411) (← links)
- A new quasi-continuum constitutive model for crack growth in an isotropic solid (Q1780725) (← links)
- A variational multiscale discontinuous Galerkin formulation for both implicit and explicit dynamic modeling of interfacial fracture (Q1986471) (← links)
- Meso-scale physical modeling of energetic degradation function in the nonlocal macro-meso-scale consistent damage model for quasi-brittle materials (Q2021267) (← links)
- A cohesive zone model which is energetically equivalent to a gradient-enhanced coupled damage-plasticity model (Q2034375) (← links)
- A continuous-discontinuous localizing gradient damage framework for failure analysis of quasi-brittle materials (Q2072696) (← links)
- A peridynamic differential operator-based scheme for the extended bond-based peridynamics and its application to fracture problems of brittle solids (Q2102680) (← links)
- XFEM to couple nonlocal micromechanics damage with discrete mode I cohesive fracture (Q2179228) (← links)
- Role of interfacial transition zone in phase field modeling of fracture in layered heterogeneous structures (Q2218603) (← links)
- Attaining regularization length insensitivity in phase-field models of ductile failure (Q2237437) (← links)
- A hybrid FEMM-phase field method for fluid-driven fracture propagation in three dimension (Q2301604) (← links)
- An extended cohesive damage model for simulating arbitrary damage propagation in engineering materials (Q2308936) (← links)
- A global-local strategy with the generalized finite element framework for continuum damage models (Q2309374) (← links)
- A new nonlocal macro-meso-scale consistent damage model for crack modeling of quasi-brittle materials (Q2310234) (← links)
- From diffuse damage to sharp cohesive cracks: a coupled XFEM framework for failure analysis of quasi-brittle materials (Q2414572) (← links)
- A medial-axis-based model for propagating cracks in a regularised bulk (Q2952637) (← links)
- A continuous-discontinuous approach to simulate physical degradation processes in porous media (Q3062609) (← links)
- An extended FE strategy for transition from continuum damage to mode I cohesive crack propagation (Q3424535) (← links)
- A method for coupling atoms to continuum mechanics for capturing dynamic crack propagation (Q3540856) (← links)
- A cohesive zone model for fatigue crack growth in quasibrittle materials (Q5938420) (← links)
- An adaptive dynamic phase-field method using the variable-node elements for cohesive dynamic fracture (Q6084538) (← links)
- From ductile damage to unilateral contact via a point-wise implicit discontinuity (Q6540759) (← links)
- A continuous-discontinuous model for crack branching (Q6549950) (← links)
- An optimization-based phase-field method for continuous-discontinuous crack propagation (Q6555213) (← links)
- A method for modeling the transition of weak discontinuities to strong discontinuities: from interfaces to cracks (Q6558918) (← links)
- A damage to crack transition model accounting for stress triaxiality formulated in a hybrid nonlocal implicit discontinuous Galerkin-cohesive band model framework (Q6565192) (← links)
- New insights into fracture and cracking simulation of quasi-brittle materials based on the NMMD model (Q6643545) (← links)