The analysis of finite elasto-plastic consolidation

From MaRDI portal
Publication:4177162

DOI10.1002/nag.1610030202zbMath0394.73097OpenAlexW1966946563MaRDI QIDQ4177162

J. C. Small, J. R. Booker, John P. Carter

Publication date: 1979

Published in: International Journal for Numerical and Analytical Methods in Geomechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/nag.1610030202



Related Items

A new coupled multiphase flow-finite strain deformation-fault slip framework for induced seismicity, A mathematical framework for finite strain elastoplastic consolidation. I: Balance laws, variational formulation, and linearization, A consistent mixed finite element formulation for hydro-mechanical processes in~saturated porous media at large strains based on a generalized material description, Finite element implementation of a geometrically and physically nonlinear consolidation model, Finite strain hyperelastoplastic modelling of saturated porous media with compressible constituents, Formulation and finite element implementation of a multiplicative model of coupled poro-plasticity at finite strains under fully saturated conditions, A comparison of adaptive time stepping methods for coupled flow and deformation modeling, Implicit-explicit schemes for nonlinear consolidation, A sequential-adaptive strategy in space-time with application to consolidation of porous media, Finite element modelling of saturated porous media at finite strains under dynamic conditions with compressible constituents, Finite strain elastic closed form solutions for some axisymmetric problems, One-step and linear multistep methods for nonlinear consolidation, Dynamics of porous media at finite strain, Elastoplastic consolidation at finite strain. II: Finite element implementation and numerical examples, Aspects of finite element formulations for the coupled problem of poroelasticity based on a canonical minimization principle, Nonlinear analysis of nearly saturated porous media: Theoretical and numerical formulation, A large deformation poroplasticity theory for microporous polymeric materials