Abstract
This paper performs an in-depth study of the theoretical basis behind the strong discontinuity methods to improve local fracture simulations using the Embedded Finite Element Method (E-FEM). The process starts from a review of the elemental enhancement functions found in current E-FEM literature, providing the reader a solid context of E-FEM fundamentals. A set of theoretical pathologies is then discussed, which prevent current frameworks from attaining full kinematic consistency and introduce unintended mesh dependencies. Based on this analysis, a new proposal of strong discontinuity enhancement functions is presented considering generalised fracture kinematics in a full tridimensional setting and a more robust definition of internal auxiliary functions. Element-level simulations are performed to compare the outputs within a group of selected E-FEM approaches, including the novel proposal. Simulations show that the new element formulation grants a wider level of basic kinematic coherence between the local fracture outputs and element kinematics, demonstrating an increase in robustness that might drive the usefulness of E-FEM techniques for fracture simulations to a higher level.
Funder
CONACYT
Commissariat à l'Énergie Atomique et aux Énergies Alternatives
Subject
General Materials Science
Cited by
3 articles.
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