Title of article :
Adaptive finite element analysis and modelling of solids and structures. Findings, problems and trends
Author/Authors :
Erwin Stein، نويسنده , , Marcus Ruter، نويسنده , , Stephan Ohnimus، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The main purpose of this paper is two-fold: first, to present a critical review of available errorcontrolled
adaptive finite element methods—with absolute global and goal-oriented error estimates—
for approximate solutions of a given mathematical model and the model error of the mathematical
model considered and its dimensions, enhanced with our own recent results in fracture mechanics. The
second related important matter is which physical/mathematical models—including various boundary
layers and other disturbances—and which accuracy of the finite element solutions in which norm
are prescribed and necessary for the safety and reliability of a certain engineering problem, e.g. in
structural engineering, of course depending on materials, systems and the type as well as the magnitude
of prescribed loadings (i.e. actions in a factorized concept) acting on a specific structure. It is hard to
understand why the current codes for structural engineering design in Europe—especially the European
Standards (Eurocodes) and the relevant German DIN-Codes (DIN: Deutsches Institut für Normung e.
V.)—do not lay out any rules or bounds for the prescribed accuracy of the computation of material and
structural resistance, i.e. the validity of mechanical modelling and the accuracy of associated numerical
methods, usually today the finite element method. It can be observed that behind the existing codes
there still lies the old thinking of, e.g., classical elastic beam theory of so-called second order for
stability problems and the corresponding elastic potential for plates and shells in buckling. Modern
flexible finite element modelling by deriving theories in variational form for thin-walled beams, plates
and shells from rather general 3D theories, for both linear and non-linear problems, capturing inelastic
deformations and layer effects by material and dimensional expansions are not addressed in the
Eurocodes for structural engineering. The necessary consequence is that joint work of computational
mechanics specialists and structural engineers, working in national and international code committees,
is absolutely necessary, in order to avoid a lot of costly troubles and dangers of today by improving
and updating the existing codes
Keywords :
a posteriori error estimation , reliability concepts of Eurocodes , linear elastic fracturemechanics , hierarchical model adaptivity , goal-oriented error estimates
Journal title :
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering
Journal title :
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering