Publication | Open Access
An extended/generalized phase‐field finite element method for crack growth with global‐local enrichment
43
Citations
68
References
2020
Year
EngineeringFracture OptimizationMechanical EngineeringComputational MechanicsGlobal ScaleFracture ModelingBackground MeshMechanics ModelingCrack GrowthDeformation ModelingGlobal‐local EnrichmentStrain LocalizationMechanical ModelingSolid MechanicsFinite Element MethodMultiscale MechanicQuasistatic Crack GrowthCrack FormationStructural MechanicsDynamic Crack PropagationNumerical MethodsMechanics Of MaterialsFracture Mechanics
Summary An extended/generalized finite element method (XFEM/GFEM) for simulating quasistatic crack growth based on a phase‐field method is presented. The method relies on approximations to solutions associated with two different scales: a global scale, that is, structural and discretized with a coarse mesh, and a local scale encapsulating the fractured region, that is, discretized with a fine mesh. A stable XFEM/GFEM is employed to embed the displacement and damage fields at the global scale. The proposed method accommodates approximation spaces that evolve between load steps, while preserving a fixed background mesh for the structural problem. In addition, a prediction‐correction algorithm is employed to facilitate the dynamic evolution of the confined crack regions within a load step. Several numerical examples of benchmark problems in two‐ and three‐dimensional quasistatic fracture are provided to demonstrate the approach.
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