The aim of this work is to employ a modified cell-based smoothed finite element method(S-FEM)for topology optimization with the domain discretized with arbitrary polygons.In the present work,the linear polynomial basi...The aim of this work is to employ a modified cell-based smoothed finite element method(S-FEM)for topology optimization with the domain discretized with arbitrary polygons.In the present work,the linear polynomial basis function is used as the weight function instead of the constant weight function used in the standard S-FEM.This improves the accuracy and yields an optimal convergence rate.The gradients are smoothed over each smoothing domain,then used to compute the stiffness matrix.Within the proposed scheme,an optimum topology procedure is conducted over the smoothing domains.Structural materials are distributed over each smoothing domain and the filtering scheme relies on the smoothing domain.Numerical tests are carried out to pursue the performance of the proposed optimization by comparing convergence,efficiency and accuracy.展开更多
This work presents a locking-free smoothed finite element method(S-FEM)for the simulation of soft matter modelled by the equations of quasi-incompressible hyperelasticity.The proposed method overcomes well-known issue...This work presents a locking-free smoothed finite element method(S-FEM)for the simulation of soft matter modelled by the equations of quasi-incompressible hyperelasticity.The proposed method overcomes well-known issues of standard finite element methods(FEM)in the incompressible limit:the over-estimation of stiffness and sensitivity to severely distorted meshes.The concepts of cell-based,edge-based and node-based S-FEMs are extended in this paper to three-dimensions.Additionally,a cubic bubble function is utilized to improve accuracy and stability.For the bubble function,an additional displacement degree of freedom is added at the centroid of the element.Several numerical studies are performed demonstrating the stability and validity of the proposed approach.The obtained results are compared with standard FEM and with analytical solutions to show the effectiveness of the method.展开更多
基金support by Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation(NRF)funded by Korea Ministry of Education(No.2016R1A6A1A0312812).
文摘The aim of this work is to employ a modified cell-based smoothed finite element method(S-FEM)for topology optimization with the domain discretized with arbitrary polygons.In the present work,the linear polynomial basis function is used as the weight function instead of the constant weight function used in the standard S-FEM.This improves the accuracy and yields an optimal convergence rate.The gradients are smoothed over each smoothing domain,then used to compute the stiffness matrix.Within the proposed scheme,an optimum topology procedure is conducted over the smoothing domains.Structural materials are distributed over each smoothing domain and the filtering scheme relies on the smoothing domain.Numerical tests are carried out to pursue the performance of the proposed optimization by comparing convergence,efficiency and accuracy.
基金Changkye Lee and Jurng-Jae Yee would like to thank the support by Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation(NRF)funded by Korea through Ministry of Education(No.2016R1A6A1A03012812).
文摘This work presents a locking-free smoothed finite element method(S-FEM)for the simulation of soft matter modelled by the equations of quasi-incompressible hyperelasticity.The proposed method overcomes well-known issues of standard finite element methods(FEM)in the incompressible limit:the over-estimation of stiffness and sensitivity to severely distorted meshes.The concepts of cell-based,edge-based and node-based S-FEMs are extended in this paper to three-dimensions.Additionally,a cubic bubble function is utilized to improve accuracy and stability.For the bubble function,an additional displacement degree of freedom is added at the centroid of the element.Several numerical studies are performed demonstrating the stability and validity of the proposed approach.The obtained results are compared with standard FEM and with analytical solutions to show the effectiveness of the method.