Special numerical techniques to joint design

The aim of this chapter is to introduce special numerical techniques. The first part covers special finite element techniques which reduce the size of the computational models. In the case of the substructuring technique, internal nodes of parts of a finite element mesh can be condensed out so that...

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Main Author: Ochsner, Andreas
Format: Book Section
Published: Springer 2011
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/45323/
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spelling my.utm.453232017-08-08T00:56:48Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/45323/ Special numerical techniques to joint design Ochsner, Andreas T Technology The aim of this chapter is to introduce special numerical techniques. The first part covers special finite element techniques which reduce the size of the computational models. In the case of the substructuring technique, internal nodes of parts of a finite element mesh can be condensed out so that they do not contribute to the size of the global stiffness matrix. A post computational step allows to determine the unknowns of the condensed nodes. In the case of the submodel technique, the results of a finite element computation based on a coarse mesh are used as input, i.e., boundary conditions, for a refined submodel. The second part of this chapters introduces alternative approximation methods to solve the partial differential equations which describe the problem. The boundary element method is characterized by the fact that the problem is shifted to the boundary of the domain and as a result, the dimensionality of the problem is reduced by one. In the case of the finite difference method, the differential equation and the boundary conditions are represented by finite difference equations. Both methods are introduced based on a simple one-dimensional problem in order to demonstrate the major idea of each method. Furthermore, advantages and disadvantages of each alternative approximation methods are given in the light of the classical finite element simulation. Whenever possible, examples of application of the techniques in the context of adhesive joints are given. Springer 2011 Book Section PeerReviewed Ochsner, Andreas (2011) Special numerical techniques to joint design. In: Handbook of Adhesion Technology. Springer, New York, pp. 661-668. ISBN 978-3-642-01168-9
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic T Technology
spellingShingle T Technology
Ochsner, Andreas
Special numerical techniques to joint design
description The aim of this chapter is to introduce special numerical techniques. The first part covers special finite element techniques which reduce the size of the computational models. In the case of the substructuring technique, internal nodes of parts of a finite element mesh can be condensed out so that they do not contribute to the size of the global stiffness matrix. A post computational step allows to determine the unknowns of the condensed nodes. In the case of the submodel technique, the results of a finite element computation based on a coarse mesh are used as input, i.e., boundary conditions, for a refined submodel. The second part of this chapters introduces alternative approximation methods to solve the partial differential equations which describe the problem. The boundary element method is characterized by the fact that the problem is shifted to the boundary of the domain and as a result, the dimensionality of the problem is reduced by one. In the case of the finite difference method, the differential equation and the boundary conditions are represented by finite difference equations. Both methods are introduced based on a simple one-dimensional problem in order to demonstrate the major idea of each method. Furthermore, advantages and disadvantages of each alternative approximation methods are given in the light of the classical finite element simulation. Whenever possible, examples of application of the techniques in the context of adhesive joints are given.
format Book Section
author Ochsner, Andreas
author_facet Ochsner, Andreas
author_sort Ochsner, Andreas
title Special numerical techniques to joint design
title_short Special numerical techniques to joint design
title_full Special numerical techniques to joint design
title_fullStr Special numerical techniques to joint design
title_full_unstemmed Special numerical techniques to joint design
title_sort special numerical techniques to joint design
publisher Springer
publishDate 2011
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/45323/
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score 13.188404