Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6915388 Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering 2018 39 Pages PDF
Abstract
The objective of the present work is to develop efficient, higher-order space- and time-accurate, methods for structural dynamics. To this end, we present a family of explicit isogeometric collocation methods for structural dynamics that are obtained from predictor-multicorrector schemes. These methods are very similar in structure to explicit finite-difference time-domain methods, and in particular, they exhibit similar levels of computational cost, ease of implementation, and ease of parallelization. However, unlike finite difference methods, they are easily extended to non-trivial geometries of engineering interest. To examine the spectral properties of the explicit isogeometric collocation methods, we first provide a semi-discrete interpretation of the classical predictor-multicorrector method. This allows us to characterize the spatial and modal accuracy of the isogeometric collocation predictor-multicorrector method, irrespective of the considered time-integration scheme, as well as the critical time step size for a particular explicit time-integration scheme. For pure Dirichlet problems, we demonstrate that it is possible to obtain a second-order-in-space scheme with one corrector pass, a fourth-order-in-space scheme with two corrector passes, and a fifth-order-in-space scheme with three corrector passes. For pure Neumann and mixed Dirichlet-Neumann problems, we demonstrate that it is possible to obtain a second-order-in-space scheme with one corrector pass and a third-order-in-space scheme with two corrector passes, and we observe that fourth-order-in-space accuracy may be obtained pre-asymptotically with three corrector passes. We then present second-order-in-time, fourth-order-in-time, and fifth-order-in-time fully discrete predictor-multicorrector algorithms that result from the application of explicit Runge-Kutta methods to the semi-discrete isogeometric collocation predictor-multicorrector method. We confirm the accuracy of the family of explicit isogeometric collocation methods using a suite of numerical examples.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science Applications
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