Constrained optimization for interface cracks in composite materials subject to non-penetration conditions
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2464067
DOI10.1007/s10665-006-9113-7zbMath1126.74040OpenAlexW2036708902WikidataQ115155206 ScholiaQ115155206MaRDI QIDQ2464067
Michael Hintermüller, Victor A. Kovtunenko, Karl Kunisch
Publication date: 10 December 2007
Published in: Journal of Engineering Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10665-006-9113-7
Brittle fracture (74R10) Composite and mixture properties (74E30) Energy minimization in equilibrium problems in solid mechanics (74G65)
Related Items
A primal-dual active set method for solving multi-rigid-body dynamic contact problems, Well-posedness of the problem of non-penetrating cracks in elastic bodies whose material moduli depend on the mean normal stress, Evolution of a crack with kink and non-penetration
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Interface cracks in composite orthotropic materials and their delamination via global shape optimization
- Explicit solution and invariance of the singularities at an interface crack in anisotropic composites
- Optimization theory application to slitted plate bending problems
- Nonsmooth equations in optimization. Regularity, calculus, methods and applications
- Semismooth and Semiconvex Functions in Constrained Optimization
- Semi–Smooth Newton Methods for Variational Inequalities of the First Kind
- Semismooth Newton Methods for Operator Equations in Function Spaces
- The Primal-Dual Active Set Strategy as a Semismooth Newton Method
- Extended finite element method for three-dimensional crack modelling
- Generalized Newton methods for crack problems with nonpenetration condition
- The Griffith formula and the Rice–Cherepanov integral for crack problems with unilateral conditions in nonsmooth domains
- The primal-dual active set method for a crack problem with non-penetration
- A finite element method for crack growth without remeshing
- Mixed Finite Element Methods for Smooth Domain Formulation of Crack Problems