Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (117)
- Conference Proceeding (31)
- Part of a Book (13)
- Book (4)
- Other (3)
- Report (2)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Patent (1)
- Review (1)
Has Fulltext
- no (173) (remove)
Keywords
- Biocomposites (2)
- Limit analysis (2)
- Natural fibres (2)
- Polymer-matrix composites (2)
- Shakedown analysis (2)
- Stress concentrations (2)
- damage (2)
- Anastomotic leakage (1)
- Autolysis (1)
- Bladder (1)
- Bone sawing (1)
- Cardiac myocytes (1)
- Cardiac tissue (1)
- CellDrum (1)
- Chance constrained programming (1)
- Collagen fibrils (1)
- Computational biomechanics (1)
- Connective tissues (1)
- Constitutive model (1)
- Damage mechanics theory (1)
Shakedown analysis of Reissner-Mindlin plates using the edge-based smoothed finite element method
(2014)
This paper concerns the development of a primal-dual algorithm for limit and shakedown analysis of Reissner-Mindlin plates made of von Mises material. At each optimization iteration, the lower bound of the shakedown load multiplier is calculated simultaneously with the upper bound using the duality theory. An edge-based smoothed finite element method (ES-FEM) combined with the discrete shear gap (DSG) technique is used to improve the accuracy of the solutions and to avoid the transverse shear locking behaviour. The method not only possesses all inherent features of convergence and accuracy from ES-FEM, but also ensures that the total number of variables in the optimization problem is kept to a minimum compared with the standard finite element formulation. Numerical examples are presented to demonstrate the effectiveness of the present method.
Sensitivity of and Influences on the Reliability of an HTR-Module Primary Circuit Pressure Boundary
(1993)
We present an electromechanically coupled computational model for the investigation of a thin cardiac tissue construct consisting of human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived atrial, ventricular and sinoatrial cardiomyocytes. The mechanical and electrophysiological parts of the finite element model, as well as their coupling are explained in detail. The model is implemented in the open source finite element code Code_Aster and is employed for the simulation of a thin circular membrane deflected by a monolayer of autonomously beating, circular, thin cardiac tissue. Two cardio-active drugs, S-Bay K8644 and veratridine, are applied in experiments and simulations and are investigated with respect to their chronotropic effects on the tissue. These results demonstrate the potential of coupled micro- and macroscopic electromechanical models of cardiac tissue to be adapted to experimental results at the cellular level. Further model improvements are discussed taking into account experimentally measurable quantities that can easily be extracted from the obtained experimental results. The goal is to estimate the potential to adapt the presented model to sample specific cell cultures.
Rezension zu: K. Zimmermann, Technische Mechanik – multimedial. Fachbuch Verlag Leipzig (2000)
(2002)