A unified approach for beam-to-beam contact
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2308951
DOI10.1016/j.cma.2016.11.028zbMath1439.74160arXiv1607.08853OpenAlexW2502053731MaRDI QIDQ2308951
Wolfgang A. Wall, Alexander Popp, Christoph Meier
Publication date: 6 April 2020
Published in: Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1607.08853
Related Items
Dynamics of nonlinear transversely vibrating beams: parametric and closed-form solutions ⋮ Perspectives on the Master-Master Contact Formulation ⋮ Finite Element Formulations for Beam-to-Solid Interaction–from Embedded Fibers Towards Contact ⋮ Analysis of static frictionless beam-to-beam contact using mortar method ⋮ Non-localised contact between beams with circular and elliptical cross-sections ⋮ Numerical method for solution of pointwise contact between surfaces ⋮ Continuous gap contact formulation based on the screened Poisson equation ⋮ Variational principles for nonlinear Kirchhoff rods ⋮ An isogeometric finite element formulation for frictionless contact of Cosserat rods with unconstrained directors ⋮ Dynamic modelling and analysis for a flexible brush sampling mechanism ⋮ Geometrically exact isogeometric Bernoulli-Euler beam based on the Frenet-Serret frame ⋮ A study of contact methods in the application of large deformation dynamics in self-contact beam ⋮ A yarn-scale woven fabric model including significant slippage formulated within the arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian framework ⋮ A contact formulation using local frame of \(SE(3)\) group for corotational beam against rigid solid via moving signed distance field ⋮ A new heterogeneous asynchronous explicit-implicit time integrator for nonsmooth dynamics ⋮ On a nonlinear rod exhibiting only axial and bending deformations: mathematical modeling and numerical implementation ⋮ A novel smoothed particle hydrodynamics and finite element coupling scheme for fluid-structure interaction: the sliding boundary particle approach ⋮ An isogeometric finite element formulation for geometrically exact Timoshenko beams with extensible directors ⋮ A geometrically exact isogeometric beam for large displacements and contacts ⋮ Master-master frictional contact and applications for beam-shell interaction ⋮ A mortar-type finite element approach for embedding 1D beams into 3D solid volumes ⋮ An implicit 3D corotational formulation for frictional contact dynamics of beams against rigid surfaces using discrete signed distance fields ⋮ An isogeometric collocation method for frictionless contact of Cosserat rods ⋮ Contact between spheres and general surfaces ⋮ Geometrically exact static isogeometric analysis of an arbitrarily curved spatial Bernoulli-Euler beam ⋮ Computing pointwise contact between bodies: a class of formulations based on master-master approach ⋮ A robust computational framework for simulating the dynamics of large assemblies of highly-flexible fibers immersed in viscous flow ⋮ Consistent coupling of positions and rotations for embedding 1D Cosserat beams into 3D solid volumes
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Self-contact modeling on beams experiencing loop formation
- Geometrically exact covariant approach for contact between curves
- Modeling and numerical treatment of elastic rods with frictionless self-contact
- Geometrically exact beam finite element formulated on the special Euclidean group \(SE(3)\)
- The interpolation of rotations and its application to finite element models of geometrically exact rods
- Frictional beam-to-beam multiple-point contact finite element
- A comparison of finite elements for nonlinear beams: the absolute nodal coordinate and geometrically exact formulations
- Hermite polynomial smoothing in beam-to-beam frictional contact
- A finite strain beam formulation. The three-dimensional dynamic problem. I
- A three-dimensional finite-strain rod model. II. Computational aspects
- The discrete energy-momentum method. Conserving algorithms for nonlinear elastodynamics
- Frictional contact between 3D beams.
- Finite-element formulation of geometrically exact three-dimensional beam theories based on interpolation of strain measures.
- An objective 3D large deformation finite element formulation for geometrically exact curved Kirchhoff rods
- Stability of elastic rods with self-contact
- A locking-free finite element formulation and reduced models for geometrically exact Kirchhoff rods
- Exact energy and momentum conserving algorithms for general models in nonlinear elasticity
- Contact-friction modeling within elastic beam assemblies: an application to knot tightening
- Geometrically exact 3D beam theory: Implementation of a strain-invariant finite element for statics and dynamics
- Generalized energy-momentum method for nonlinear adaptive shell dynamics
- A finite element approach for the line-to-line contact interaction of thin beams with arbitrary orientation
- Resolution of sub-element length scales in Brownian dynamics simulations of biopolymer networks with geometrically exact beam finite elements
- Enhanced multiple-point beam-to-beam frictionless contact finite element
- On the solvability of closest point projection procedures in contact analysis: analysis and solution strategy for surfaces of arbitrary geometry
- Numerical method for the simulation of the Brownian dynamics of rod-like microstructures with three-dimensional nonlinear beam elements
- Director-based beam finite elements relying on the geometrically exact beam theory formulated in skew coordinates
- A Time Integration Algorithm for Structural Dynamics With Improved Numerical Dissipation: The Generalized-α Method
- Objectivity of strain measures in the geometrically exact three-dimensional beam theory and its finite-element implementation
- ON CONTACT BETWEEN THREE-DIMENSIONAL BEAMS UNDERGOING LARGE DEFLECTIONS
- Contact with friction between beams in 3-D space
- Contact between 3D beams with rectangular cross-sections
- An objective finite element approximation of the kinematics of geometrically exact rods and its use in the formulation of an energy-momentum conserving scheme in dynamics
This page was built for publication: A unified approach for beam-to-beam contact