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Completed Beltrami-Michell formulation for analyzing mixed boundary value problems in elasticity
14
Citations
11
References
1996
Year
Numerical AnalysisEngineeringMechanical EngineeringBeltrami-michell FormulationStructural OptimizationComputational MechanicsContinuum MechanicComposite Circular PlateStructural EngineeringMechanicsNumerical SimulationDisplacement MethodBoundary Element MethodMethod Of Fundamental SolutionFree Boundary ProblemBoundary Value ProblemsMechanical ModelingNumerical Method For Partial Differential EquationFinite Element MethodCivil EngineeringStructural AnalysisStructural MechanicsMechanics Of MaterialsMultiscale Modeling
In elasticity, the method of forces, wherein stress parameters are considered as the primary unknowns, is known as the Beltrami-Michell formulation (BMF). The existing BMF can only solve stress boundary value problems; it cannot handle the more prevalent displacement of mixed boundary value problems of elasticity. Therefore, this formulation, which has restricted application, could not become a true alternative to the Navier's displacement method, which can solve all three types of boundary value problems. The restrictions in the BMF have been alleviated by augmenting the classical formulation with a novel set of conditions identified as the boundary compatibility conditions. This new method, which completes the classical force formulation, has been termed the completed Beltrami-Michell formulation (CBMF). The CBMF can solve general elasticity problems with stress, displacement, and mixed boundary conditions in terms of stresses as the primary unknowns. The CBMF is derived from the stationary condition of the variational functional of the integrated force method. In the CBMF, stresses for kinematically stable structures can be obtained without any reference to the displacements either in the field or on the boundary. This paper presents the CBMF and its derivation from the variational functional of the integrated force method. Several examples are presented to demonstrate the applicability of the completed formulation for analyzing mixed boundary value problems under thermomechanical loads. Selected example problems include a cylindrical shell wherein membrane and bending responses are coupled, and a composite circular plate.
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