Deformation Due to Thermal Source in Micropolar Generalized Thermoelastic Half-Space by Finite Element Method

2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 185-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ibrahim A. Abbas ◽  
Rajneesh Kumar
2016 ◽  
Vol 837 ◽  
pp. 5-9
Author(s):  
Lubos Hrustinec ◽  
Jozef Sumec

The paper deals with numerical analysis of deformations and relative displacements (relative settlement, relative deflection and flexibility) of the shallow square foundations depending on the variable relative stiffness. For solution of the problem finite element method was used with theoretical assumptions of the linearly elastic half-space. Foundation-subsoil contact was modelled by one-directional and bi-directional bond effect. Results of the solution are presented by graphical forms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erika Ronchin ◽  
Raffaele Castaldo ◽  
Susi Pepe ◽  
Pietro Tizzani ◽  
Giuseppe Solaro ◽  
...  

<p>The detailed spatial and temporal information of surface deformation detected during volcanic unrest by InSAR images suggests a degree of complexity of volcanic systems (e.g., source geometries and distribution of material properties) that cannot be correctly represented by simple models of a pressure source embedded in an elastic, homogeneous, isotropic half-space.</p><p>The inversion of deformation data, performed for the characterization of the source of deformation, is based on the model we choose to represent the volcanic system. Therefore the quality of the chosen model influences the source size and its temporal changes estimated through the inversion, and thus their interpretation. In fact, our assumptions about geometries and/or magma and rock properties affect the estimations of changes in magma volumes and reservoir pressure. To obtain a more reliable interpretation of surface signals, it is thus paramount to have more realistic models, where the distribution of material properties is constrained by multiple data sets, with greater flexibility in the definition of sources in space and time.</p><p>Assuming we could invert InSAR data with models that can deal with a complex and arbitrarily shaped deformation source, how unique could this solution be? How much could we say about the evolution of the deformation source over time? Furthermore, how much information about the spatial complexity of the source and its evolution in space and time would be missed?</p><p>To answer these questions, we characterize the deformation source from the inversion of InSAR data based on a finite element method (FEM) forward model without an a-priori source geometry. The deformation source is bound by estimating the strength of an amorphous cluster of deformation sources distributed over a grid. This uses the principle of superposition already applied to point or cuboid volume elements, embedded in a homogeneous half-space. Also, the numerical model integrates the cluster-source with a heterogeneous distribution of material properties and the topography.</p><p>In our study, we quantify the ambiguity in the estimation of arbitrary geometries of sources of deformation composed by clusters of Finite Element Method unit sources distributed over a grid. The regularized least-squares solutions of the steady-state PDEs inverse model are obtained using a COMSOL Multiphysics-based routine. Through the inversion of the InSAR time series of the unrest at Uturuncu volcano (Bolivia), we quantify the ability of the employed cluster-source approach to identify the changes of deformation sources in time. </p><p>This research is financed by an individual fellowship of the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 793811.</p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 04 (04) ◽  
pp. 1250046 ◽  
Author(s):  
TIANHU HE ◽  
YANYAN LI ◽  
SHUANHU SHI

In the context of the theory of generalized thermoelastic diffusion, a two-dimensional generalized electromagneto-thermoelastic problem with diffusion for a half-space is investigated. The half-space is placed in an external magnetic field with constant intensity and its bounding surface is subjected to a thermal shock and a chemical potential shock. The governing equations of the problem are formulated and solved numerically by means of finite element method. The derived finite element equations are solved directly in time domain. The nondimensional temperature, displacement, stress, chemical potential, concentration and induced magnetic field are obtained and illustrated graphically. The results show that all the considered variables have a nonzero value only in a bounded region and vanish identically outside this region, which fully demonstrates the nature of the finite speeds of thermoelastic wave and diffusive wave.


2014 ◽  
Vol 92 (11) ◽  
pp. 1305-1311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ibrahim A. Abbas ◽  
Rajneesh Kumar ◽  
Lajvinder Singh Reen

A two-dimensional problem in a transversely isotropic thermoelastic medium without energy dissipation and with two temperatures due to a thermal source is investigated. As an application of the problem, a particular type of continuous thermal source has been taken to illustrate the utility of the approach. The problem is solved numerically by using a finite element method. The displacement components, conductive temperature, and stress components have been obtained numerically and illustrated graphically for our particular model. Some special cases of interest are also discussed. The implementation of finite element method codes used C++. Numerical work is also performed for a suitable material with the aim of illustrating the results.


Author(s):  
Loukas F. Kallivokas ◽  
Jacobo Bielak

Abstract This paper is concerned with the numerical solution by the finite element method of transient and time-harmonic three-dimensional acoustic scattering problems in infinite and semi-infinite domains. Its main objective is to illustrate how a local second-order surface-only infinite element — either transient or time-harmonic — developed recently for the three-dimensional wave equation in a full-space can be applied readily to scattering problems with penetrable objects near a planar free surface. Taking a problem in structural acoustics as a prototype, the combined infinite element-finite element method is used here to determine the total and scattered pressure patterns generated when a traveling plane wave impinges upon a structure of general geometry submerged in an acoustic fluid in half-space. One key feature of this methodology is that the ordinary differential equations that result from the spatial discretization maintain the symmetry and sparsity associated with problems defined only over interior domains; the resulting equations can then be solved by standard step-by-step time integration techniques. Thus, the combination of low bandwidth matrices with the ease of use of the infinite elements places the method in an ideal position to meet the large computational demands typically associated with large-scale underwater acoustics problems.


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