bibtype J - Journal Article
ARLID 0647372
utime 20260316092645.6
mtime 20260314235959.9
SCOPUS 85214560203
WOS 001690440300001
DOI 10.1016/j.cma.2024.117671
title (primary) (eng) Shear-flexible geometrically exact beam element based on finite differences
specification
page_count 50 s.
media_type P
serial
ARLID cav_un_epca*0256442
ISSN 0045-7825
title Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering
volume_id 436
publisher
name Elsevier
keyword Geometrically nonlinear beam
keyword Shear flexible beam
keyword Stability
keyword Buckling
keyword Shooting method
keyword Large rotations
author (primary)
ARLID cav_un_auth*0383509
name1 Jirásek
name2 M.
country CZ
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0439612
name1 Horák
name2 Martin
institution UTIA-B
full_dept (cz) Matematická teorie rozhodování
full_dept Department of Decision Making Theory
department (cz) MTR
department MTR
country CZ
fullinstit Ústav teorie informace a automatizace AV ČR, v. v. i.
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0505493
name1 Ribolla
name2 E. L.
country IT
garant K
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0505494
name1 Bonvissuto
name2 Ch.
country IT
source
url https://library.utia.cas.cz/separaty/2026/MTR/horak-0647372.pdf
source
url https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0045782524009253?via%3Dihub
cas_special
abstract (eng) The proposed two-dimensional geometrically exact beam element extends our previous work by including the effects of shear distortion, and also of distributed forces and moments acting along the beam. The general flexibility-based formulation exploits the kinematic equations combined with the inverted sectional equations and the integrated form of equilibrium equations. The resulting set of three first-order differential equations is discretized by finite differences and the boundary value problem is converted into an initial value problem using the shooting method. Due to the special structure of the governing equations, the scheme remains explicit even though the first derivatives are approximated by central differences, leading to high accuracy. The main advantage of the adopted approach is that the error can be efficiently reduced by refining the computational grid used for finite differences at the element level while keeping the number of global degrees of freedom low. The efficiency is also increased by dealing directly with the global centerline coordinates and sectional inclination with respect to global axes as the primary unknowns at the element level, thereby avoiding transformations between local and global coordinates. Two formulations of the sectional equations, namely the widely used Reissner model and a less common version referred to as the Ziegler model, are presented and compared. In particular, stability of an axially loaded beam/column is investigated and the connections to the Haringx and Engesser stability theories are discussed. Both approaches are tested in a series of numerical examples, which illustrate (i) high accuracy with quadratic convergence when the spatial discretization is refined, (ii) easy modeling of variable stiffness along the element (such as rigid joint offsets), (iii) efficient and accurate characterization of the buckling and post-buckling behavior.
result_subspec WOS
RIV IN
FORD0 10000
FORD1 10200
FORD2 10201
reportyear 2026
num_of_auth 4
inst_support RVO:67985556
permalink https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0376956
cooperation
ARLID cav_un_auth*0505484
name Czech Technical University in Prague, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Department of Mechanics
institution CVUT-FSV-MECH
country CZ
confidential S
article_num 117671
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mrcbU63 cav_un_epca*0256442 Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering 436 1 2025 0045-7825 1879-2138 Elsevier