Quasi-invertible analytic elements

Keyword(s):  
1990 ◽  
Vol s2-42 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-146
Author(s):  
Alain Escassut ◽  
Bertin Diarra
Keyword(s):  
Open Set ◽  

1991 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 1565-1584
Author(s):  
Escassut Alain

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Toller ◽  
Otto Strack

<p>Understanding and modelling hydraulic fractures and fracture networks have a fundamental role in mapping the mechanical behaviour of rocks. A problem arises in the discontinuous behaviour of the fractures and how to accurately and efficiently model this. We present a novel approach for modelling many cracks randomly using analytic elements placed under plane strain conditions in an elastic medium. The analytic elements allow us to model the assembly computationally efficiently and up to machine precision. The crack element is the first step in the development of a model suitable for investigating the effect of fissures on tunnels in rock. The model can be used to validate numerical models and more.The solution for a single hydraulic pressurized crack in an infinite domain in plane strain was initially developed by Griffith (1921). We demonstrate that it is possible, by using series expansions in terms of complex variables, based on the Muskhelisvili-Kolosov functions, to generalize this solution to the case of an assembly of non-intersecting pressurized cracks. The solution consists of infinite series for each element Strack & Toller (2020). The expressions for the displacements and stress tensor components approach the exact solution, as the number of terms in the series approaches infinity.We present the case where two cracks approach each other orthogonally to less than 1/2000th of the cracks length. We show the effect of increasing the number of terms in the expansion and how this influences the precision, demonstrating that the result approaches the exact solution. We also present a case with 10,000 cracks; the coefficients are determined using an iterative solver. By using analytic elements, we can both present the corresponding stress and deformations field for the global scale and for small scales in the close proximity of individual cracks.ReferencesGriffith, A. A. (1921). The phenomena of rupture and flow in solids. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical or Physical Character, 221(582-593):163–198.Strack, O. D. L. and Toller, E. A. L. (2020). An analytic element model for highly fractured elastic media, manuscript submitted for publication in International Journal for Numerical and Analytical Methods in Geomechanics.</p>


2020 ◽  
pp. 103-164
Author(s):  
David R. Steward

The mathematical functions associated with analytic elements may be formulated using a complex function $\Omega$ of a complex variable ${\zcomplex}$. Complex formulation of analytic elements is introduced in Section 3.1 for exact solutions obtained by embedding point elements that generate divergence, circulation, or velocity within a uniform vector field. Influence functions for analytic elements with circular geometry are obtained using Taylor and Laurent series expansions in Section 3.2, and conformal mapping extends this formulation to analytic elements with the geometry of ellipses (Section 3.3). The Courant's Sewing Theorem is employed in Section 3.4 to develop solutions for interface conditions across straight line segments, and the Joukowsky transformation extends methods to circular arcs and wings (Section 3.5), which satisfy a Kutta condition of non-singular vector field at their trailing edges. Vector fields with spatially distributed divergence and curl are formulated using the complex variable ${\zcomplex}$ with its complex conjugate $\overline{\zcomplex}$ in Section 3.6, and the complex conjugate is further employed in the Kolosov formulas (Section 3.7) to solve force deformation problems for analytic elements with traction or displacement specified boundary conditions.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-70
Author(s):  
David R. Steward

This chapter introduces the philosophical perspective for solving problems with the Analytic Element Method, organized within three common types of problems: gradient driven flow and conduction, waves, and deformation by forces. These problems are illustrated by classic, well known solutions to problems with a single isolated element, along with their extension to complicated interactions occurring amongst collections of elements. Analytic elements are presented within fields of study to demonstrate their capacity to represent important processes and properties across a broad range of applications, and to provide a template for transcending solutions across the wide range of conditions occurring along boundaries and interfaces. While the mathematical and computational developments necessary to solve each problem are developed in later chapters, each figure documents where its solutions are presented.


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