• Title/Summary/Keyword: Continuum mechanics

Search Result 307, Processing Time 0.02 seconds

Magnetic Field Analysis Due to the Remanent Magnetization Distributed on a Ferromagnetic Thin Plate by using Equivalent Magnetic Models and Material Sensitivity (등가 자기모델과 매질민감도법을 이용한 강자성체 판에 분포하는 영구자화에 기인한 자기장 신호분석)

  • Jeung, Gi-Woo;Kim, Dong-Wook;Kim, Dong-Hun;Yang, Chang-Seob;Chung, Hyun-Ju
    • Journal of the Korean Magnetics Society
    • /
    • v.20 no.3
    • /
    • pp.100-105
    • /
    • 2010
  • For predicting magnetic signals due to the remanent magnetization distributed on a ferromagnetic ship hull, this paper presents an efficient methodology for solving inverse problems, where the material sensitivity analysis based on the continuum mechanics is combined with the equivalent magnetic models. To achieve this, the 3D magnetic charge model and the magnetic dipole moment model are introduced and material sensitivity formulae applicable to each equivalent model are derived. The formulae offer the first-order gradient information of an objective function with respect to the variation of the magnetic charge or magnetic dipole and so an optimal solution can be easily obtained regardless of the number of design variables. To validate the proposed method, the numerical results are comparison with the real measurements of a mock-up model.

The Effect of Rock Joints and Ground Water on the Thermal Flow through Rock Mass (절리 및 지하수가 암반의 열전파 특성에 미치는 영향)

  • 박연준;유광호;신희순;신중호
    • Tunnel and Underground Space
    • /
    • v.12 no.3
    • /
    • pp.220-228
    • /
    • 2002
  • Thermal flow through jointed rock mass was analyzed by numerical methods. The effect of a single set of joints on the heat conduction was analyzed by one-dimensional model and compared with the analytical solution. When a joint is completely dry, the joint behaves as a thermal break inducing jumps in temperature distribution even at steady state. Therefore when joints are completely dry, individual joint has to be taken into consideration to get a good result. When joints are partially or fully saturated, the thermal conductivity of the joints increases drastically and the jumps in temperature distribution become less severe. Therefore the effect of joint in heat conduction can be well absorbed by continuum anisotropic model whose thermal properties represent overall thermal properties of the intact part and the discontinuities. Since the effect of joints becomes less important as the degree of the saturation increases, the overall thermal response of the rock mass also becomes close to isotropic. Therefore it can be concluded that a great effort has to be made to obtain a precise in-situ thermal properties in order to get a good prediction of the thermal response of a jointed rock mass.

A Nonlinear Finite Element Formulation for Very Large Deformation based on Updated Material Reference Frame (변화되는 재료의 기준 물성치에 근거한 매우 큰 변화에 대한 비선형 유한요소의 정식화)

  • Yun, Young Muk;Park, Moon Ho
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
    • /
    • v.12 no.3
    • /
    • pp.25-37
    • /
    • 1992
  • A nonlinear finite element formulation which has the capability of handling very large geometrical changes is presented. The formulation is based on an updated material reference frame and hence true stress-strain test can be directly applied to properly characterize properties of materials which are subjected to very large deformation. For the large deformation, a consistent formulation based on the continuum mechanics approach is derived. The kinematics is referred to an updated material frame. Body equilibrium is also established in an updated geometry and the second Piola-Kirchhoff stress and the updated Lagrangian strain tensor are used in the formulation. Numerical examples for very large deformation of framed structures and plane solids are analyzed for verification purposes. The numerical solutions are obtained by an incremental numerical procedure. The importance of handing material properties properly is also demonstrated.

  • PDF

Mechanism of shear strength deterioration of loess during freeze-thaw cycling

  • Xu, Jian;Wang, Zhangquan;Ren, Jianwei;Yuan, Jun
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
    • /
    • v.14 no.4
    • /
    • pp.307-314
    • /
    • 2018
  • Strength of loess that experienced cyclic freeze and thaw is of great significance for evaluating stability of slopes and foundations in loess regions. This paper takes the frequently encountered loess in the Northwestern China as the study object and carried out three kinds of laboratory tests including freeze-thaw test, direct shear test and SEM test to investigate the strength behaviors of loess after cyclic freeze and thaw, and the correlation with meso-level changes in soil structure. Results show that for loess specimens at four dry densities, the cohesion decreases with freeze-thaw cycles until a residual value is reached and thus an exponential equation is proposed. Besides, little change in the angle of internal friction was observed as freeze-thaw proceeds. This may depend on the varying of soil structure, based on which a clue can be found from the surface morphology and mesoscopic scanning of loess specimens. Clearly we observed significant changes in surface morphology of loess and it tends to aggravate at higher water contents or more cycles of freeze and thaw. Moreover, freeze-thaw cycling leads to obvious changes in the meso-structure of loess including lowering the particle aggregates and increasing both the proportion of fine particles and porosity area ratio. A damage variable dependent on the ratio of porosity area is introduced based on the continuum damage mechanics and its correlation with cohesion is discussed.

Free vibration analysis of combined system with variable cross section in tall buildings

  • Jahanshahia, Mohammad Reza;Rahgozar, Reza
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
    • /
    • v.42 no.5
    • /
    • pp.715-728
    • /
    • 2012
  • This paper deals with determining the fundamental frequency of tall buildings that consist of framed tube, shear core, belt truss and outrigger systems in which the framed tube and shear core vary in size along the height of the structure. The effect of belt truss and outrigger system is modeled as a concentrated rotational linear spring at the belt truss and outrigger system location. Many cantilevered tall structures can be treated as cantilevered beams with variable cross-section in free vibration analysis. In this paper, the continuous approach, in which a tall building is replaced by an idealized cantilever continuum representing the structural characteristics, is employed and by using energy method and Hamilton's variational principle, the governing equation for free vibration of tall building with variable distributed mass and stiffness is obtained. The general solution of governing equation is obtained by making appropriate selection for mass and stiffness distribution functions. By applying the separation of variables method for time and space, the governing partial differential equation of motion is reduced to an ordinary differential equation with variable coefficients with the assumption that the transverse displacement is harmonic. A power-series solution representing the mode shape function of tall building is used. Applying boundary conditions yields the boundary value problem; the frequency equation is established and solved through a numerical process to determine the natural frequencies. Computer program has been developed in Matlab (R2009b, Version 7.9.0.529, Mathworks Inc., California, USA). A numerical example has been solved to demonstrate the reliability of this method. The results of the proposed mathematical model give a good understanding of the structure's dynamic characteristics; it is easy to use, yet reasonably accurate and suitable for quick evaluations during the preliminary design stages.

Use of finite and infinite elements in static analysis of pavement

  • Patil, V.A.;Sawant, V.A.;Deb, Kousik
    • Interaction and multiscale mechanics
    • /
    • v.3 no.1
    • /
    • pp.95-110
    • /
    • 2010
  • In recent years, study of the static response of pavements to moving vehicle and aircraft loads has received significant attention because of its relevance to the design of pavements and airport runways. The static response of beams resting on an elastic foundation and subjected to moving loads was studied by several researchers in the past. However, most of these studies were limited to steady-state analytical solutions for infinitely long beams resting on Winkler-type elastic foundations. Although the modelling of subgrade as a continuum is more accurate, such an approach can hardly be incorporated in analysis due to its complexity. In contrast, the two-parameter foundation model provides a better way for simulating the underlying soil medium and is conceptually more appealing than the one-parameter (Winkler) foundation model. The finite element method is one of the most suitable mathematical tools for analysing rigid pavements under moving loads. This paper presents an improved solution algorithm based on the finite element method for the static analysis of rigid pavements under moving vehicular or aircraft loads. The concrete pavement is discretized by finite and infinite beam elements, with the latter for modelling the infinity boundary conditions. The underlying soil medium is modelled by the Pasternak model allowing the shear interaction to exist between the spring elements. This can be accomplished by connecting the spring elements to a layer of incompressible vertical elements that can deform in transverse shear only. The deformations and forces maintaining equilibrium in the shear layer are considered by assuming the shear layer to be isotropic. A parametric study is conducted to investigate the effect of the position of moving loads on the response of pavement.

Evaluation of Crack-tip Cohesive Laws for the Mode I Fracture of the Graphene from Molecular Dynamics Simulations (그래핀의 모드 I 균열에 대한 분자동역학 해석으로부터 균열 선단 응집 법칙의 평가)

  • Kim, Hyun-Gyu
    • Journal of the Computational Structural Engineering Institute of Korea
    • /
    • v.26 no.5
    • /
    • pp.393-399
    • /
    • 2013
  • In this paper, a novel approach to estimate cohesive laws for the mode I fracture of the graphene is presented by combining molecular dynamic simulations and an inverse algorithm based on field projection method and finite element method. The determination of crack-tip cohesive laws of the graphene based on continuum mechanics is a non-trivial inverse problem of finding unknown tractions and separations from atomic simulations. The displacements of molecular dynamic simulations in a region far away from the crack tip are transferred to finite element nodes by using moving least square approximation. Inverse analyses for extracting unknown cohesive tractions and separation behind the crack tip can be carried out by using conservation nature of the interaction J- and M-integrals with numerical auxiliary fields which are generated by systematically imposing uniform surface tractions element-by-element along the crack surfaces in finite element models. The preset method can be a very successful approach to extract crack-tip cohesive laws from molecular dynamic simulations as a scale bridging method.

Elastic-Damage Constitutive Model for Nonlinear Tensile Behavior of Polymeric Foam (폴리머 폼의 비선형 인장거동을 모사하기 위한 기공이 고려된 손상 탄성 구성방정식)

  • Kwon, Sun-Beom;Lee, Jae-Myung
    • Journal of the Computational Structural Engineering Institute of Korea
    • /
    • v.31 no.4
    • /
    • pp.191-197
    • /
    • 2018
  • This paper details the development of an isotropic elastic-damage constitutive model for polymeric foam based on irreversible thermodynamics to consider the growth and coalescence of voids. The constitutive equations describe the material behavior sustaining unilateral damage. To facilitate finite element analysis, the material properties for specific types of polymeric foams are applied to the developed model; the model is then implemented in ABAQUS as a user-defined material subroutine. To validate the developed damage model, the simulated results are compared to the results of a series of tensile tests on various polymeric foams. The proposed damage model can be utilized to further research on continuum damage mechanics and finite element analysis of polymeric foams in computational engineering.

An Extended Modal Warping Approach to Real-Time Simulation of Thin Shells (얇은 쉘의 실시간 시뮬레이션을 위한 모달 와핑 기법의 확장)

  • Choi, Min-Gyu;Woo, Seung-Yong;Ko, Hyeong-Seok
    • Journal of Korea Game Society
    • /
    • v.7 no.2
    • /
    • pp.11-20
    • /
    • 2007
  • This paper proposes a real-time simulation technique for thin shells undergoing large deformation. Shells are thin objects such as leaves and papers that can be abstracted as 2D structures. Development of a satisfactory physical model that runs in real-time but produces visually convincing animation of thin shells has been remaining a challenge in computer graphics. Rather than resorting to shell theory which involves the most complex formulations in continuum mechanics, we adopt the energy functions from the discrete shells proposed by Grinspun et al. For real-time integration of the governing equation, we develop a modal warping technique for shells. This new simulation framework results from making extensions to the original modal warping technique which was developed for the simulation of 3D solids. We report experimental results, which show that the proposed method runs in real-time even for large meshes, and that it can simulate large bending and/or twisting deformations with acceptable realism.

  • PDF

Nonlocal elasticity approach for free longitudinal vibration of circular truncated nanocones and method of determining the range of nonlocal small scale

  • Li, C.;Sui, S.H.;Chen, L.;Yao, L.Q.
    • Smart Structures and Systems
    • /
    • v.21 no.3
    • /
    • pp.279-286
    • /
    • 2018
  • The free longitudinal vibration of a circular truncated nanocone is investigated based on the nonlocal elasticity theory. Exact analytical formulations for tapered nanostructures are derived and the nonlinear differential governing equation of motion is developed. The nonlocal small scale effect unavailable in classical continuum theory is addressed to reveal the long-range interaction of atoms implicated in nonlocal constitutive relation. Unlike most previous studies applying the truncation method to the infinite higher-order differential equation, this paper aims to consider all higher-order terms to show the overall nonlocality. The explicit solution of nonlocal stress for longitudinal deformation is determined and it is an infinite series incorporating the classical stress derived in classical mechanics of materials and the infinite higher-order derivative of longitudinal displacement. Subsequently, the first three modes natural frequencies are calculated numerically and the significant effects of nonlocal small scale and vertex angle on natural frequencies are examined. The coupling phenomenon of natural frequency is observed and it is induced by the combined effects of nonlocal small scale and vertex angle. The critical value of nonlocal small scale is defined, and after that a new proposal for determining the range of nonlocal small scale is put forward since the principle of choosing the nonlocal small scale is still unclear at present. Additionally, two different types of nonlocal effects, namely the nonlocal stiffness weakening and strengthening, reversed phenomena existing in nanostructures are observed and verified. Hence the opposite nonlocal effects are resolved again clearly. The nano-engineers dealing with a circular truncated nanocone-based sensors and oscillators may benefit from the present work.