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Aspects of the formulation and finite element implementation of large strain isotropic elasticity
Author(s) -
Miehe C.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
international journal for numerical methods in engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.421
H-Index - 168
eISSN - 1097-0207
pISSN - 0029-5981
DOI - 10.1002/nme.1620371202
Subject(s) - hyperelastic material , finite element method , infinitesimal strain theory , unimodular matrix , elasticity (physics) , mathematics , isotropy , plane stress , finite strain theory , compressibility , constitutive equation , mathematical analysis , cauchy stress tensor , isochoric process , eulerian path , cauchy elastic material , physics , mechanics , structural engineering , engineering , discrete mathematics , quantum mechanics , lagrangian , thermodynamics
The paper presents a formulation of isotropic large strain elasticity and addresses some computational aspects of its finite element implementation. On the theoretical side, an Eulerian setting of isotropic elasticity is discussed exclusively in terms of the Finger tensor as a strain measure. Noval aspects are a direct representation of the Eulerian elastic moduli in terms of the Finger tensor and their rigorous decomposition into decoupled volumetric and isochoric contributions based on a multiplicative split of the Finger tensor into spherical and unimodular parts. The isochoric stress response is formulated in terms of the eigenvalues of the unimodular part of the Finger tensor. A constitutive algorithm for the computation of the stresses and tangent moduli for plane problems is developed and applied to a model problem of rubber elasticity. On the computational side, the implementation of the constitutive model in three possible finite element formulations is discussed. After pointing out algorithmic techniques for the treatment of incompressible elasticity, several numerical simulations are presented which show the performance of the proposed constitutive algorithm and the convergence behaviour of the different finite element fomulations for compressible and incompressible elasticity.