@inproceedings{SchraderKoenke, author = {Schrader, Kai and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, title = {SPARSE APPROXIMATE COMPUTATION OF SADDLE POINT PROBLEMS ARISING FROM FETI-DP DISCRETIZATION}, editor = {G{\"u}rlebeck, Klaus and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, organization = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, issn = {1611-4086}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.2887}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170314-28874}, pages = {12}, abstract = {The numerical simulation of microstructure models in 3D requires, due to enormous d.o.f., significant resources of memory as well as parallel computational power. Compared to homogeneous materials, the material hetrogeneity on microscale induced by different material phases demand for adequate computational methods for discretization and solution process of the resulting highly nonlinear problem. To enable an efficient/scalable solution process of the linearized equation systems the heterogeneous FE problem will be described by a FETI-DP (Finite Element Tearing and Interconnecting - Dual Primal) discretization. The fundamental FETI-DP equation can be solved by a number of different approaches. In our approach the FETI-DP problem will be reformulated as Saddle Point system, by eliminating the primal and Lagrangian variables. For the reduced Saddle Point system, only defined by interior and dual variables, special Uzawa algorithms can be adapted for iteratively solving the FETI-DP saddle-point equation system (FETI-DP SPE). A conjugate gradient version of the Uzawa algorithm will be shown as well as some numerical tests regarding to FETI-DP discretization of small examples using the presented solution technique. Furthermore the inversion of the interior-dual Schur complement operator can be approximated using different techniques building an adequate preconditioning matrix and therewith leading to substantial gains in computing time efficiency.}, subject = {Angewandte Informatik}, language = {en} } @article{NasserSchwedlerWuttkeetal., author = {Nasser, Mourad and Schwedler, Michael and Wuttke, Frank and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, title = {Seismic analysis of structural response using simplified soil-structure interaction models}, series = {Bauingenieur, D-A-CH-Mitteilungsblatt}, journal = {Bauingenieur, D-A-CH-Mitteilungsblatt}, abstract = {Seismic analysis of structural response using simplified soil-structure interaction models}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{UngerKoenke, author = {Unger, J{\"o}rg F. and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, title = {PARAMETER IDENTIFICATION OF MESOSCALE MODELS FROM MACROSCOPIC TESTS USING BAYESIAN NEURAL NETWORKS}, editor = {G{\"u}rlebeck, Klaus and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, organization = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, issn = {1611-4086}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.2898}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170314-28984}, pages = {5}, abstract = {In this paper, a parameter identification procedure using Bayesian neural networks is proposed. Based on a training set of numerical simulations, where the material parameters are simulated in a predefined range using Latin Hypercube sampling, a Bayesian neural network, which has been extended to describe the noise of multiple outputs using a full covariance matrix, is trained to approximate the inverse relation from the experiment (displacements, forces etc.) to the material parameters. The method offers not only the possibility to determine the parameters itself, but also the accuracy of the estimate and the correlation between these parameters. As a result, a set of experiments can be designed to calibrate a numerical model.}, subject = {Angewandte Informatik}, language = {en} } @article{LahmerKoenkeBettzieche, author = {Lahmer, Tom and K{\"o}nke, Carsten and Bettzieche, Volker}, title = {Optimale Positionierung von Messeinrichtungen an Staumauern zur Bauwerks{\"u}berwachung}, series = {WASSERWIRTSCHAFT}, journal = {WASSERWIRTSCHAFT}, pages = {16 -- 16}, abstract = {Optimale Positionierung von Messeinrichtungen an Staumauern zur Bauwerks{\"u}berwachung}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {de} } @article{LahmerKoenkeBettzieche, author = {Lahmer, Tom and K{\"o}nke, Carsten and Bettzieche, Volker}, title = {Optimal positioning of sensors for the monitoring of water dams}, series = {WASSERWIRTSCHAFT}, journal = {WASSERWIRTSCHAFT}, pages = {16 -- 19}, abstract = {Optimal positioning of sensors for the monitoring of water dams}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {de} } @inproceedings{Itam, author = {Itam, Zarina}, title = {NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF THERMO-HYGRAL ALKALI-SILICA REACTION MODEL IN CONCRETE AT THE MESOSCALE}, editor = {G{\"u}rlebeck, Klaus and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, organization = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, issn = {1611-4086}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.2853}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170314-28536}, pages = {7}, abstract = {This research aims to model Alkali-Silica Reaction gel expansion in concrete under the influence of hygral and thermal loading, based on experimental results. ASR provokes a heterogeneous expansion in concrete leading to dimensional changes and eventually the premature failure of the concrete structure. This can result in map cracking on the concrete surface which will decrease the concrete stiffness. Factors that influence ASR are parameters such as the cement alkalinity, the number of deleterious silica from the aggregate used, concrete porosity, and external factors like temperature, humidity and external source of alkali from ingression of deicing salts. Uncertainties of the influential factors make ASR a difficult phenomenon to solve; hence my approach to this matter is to solve the problem using stochastic modelling, where a numerical simulation of concrete cross-section with integration of experimental results from Finger-Institute for Building Materials Science at the Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar. The problem is formulated as a multi-field problem, combining heat transfer, fluid transfer and the reaction rate model with the mechanical stress field. Simulation is performed as a mesoscale model considering aggregates and mortar matrix. The reaction rate model will be conducted using experimental results from concrete expansions due to ASR gained from concrete prism tests. Expansive strains values for transient environmental conditions due to the reaction rate will be determined from calculation based on the reaction rate model. Results from these models will be able to predict the rate of ASR expansion and the cracking propagation that may arise.}, subject = {Angewandte Informatik}, language = {en} } @article{KoenkeEckardtHaefneretal., author = {K{\"o}nke, Carsten and Eckardt, Stefan and H{\"a}fner, Stefan and Luther, Torsten and Unger, J{\"o}rg F.}, title = {Multiscale simulation methods in damage prediction of brittle and ductile materials}, series = {International Journal for Multiscale Computational Engineering}, journal = {International Journal for Multiscale Computational Engineering}, pages = {17 -- 36}, abstract = {Multiscale simulation methods in damage prediction of brittle and ductile materials}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{HaefnerVogelKoenke, author = {H{\"a}fner, Stefan and Vogel, Frank and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, title = {FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF TORSION FOR ARBITRARY CROSS-SECTIONS}, editor = {G{\"u}rlebeck, Klaus and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, organization = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, issn = {1611-4086}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.2848}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170314-28483}, pages = {11}, abstract = {The present article proposes an alternative way to compute the torsional stiffness based on three-dimensional continuum mechanics instead of applying a specific theory of torsion. A thin, representative beam slice is discretized by solid finite elements. Adequate boundary conditions and coupling conditions are integrated into the numerical model to obtain a proper answer on the torsion behaviour, thus on shear center, shear stress and torsional stiffness. This finite element approach only includes general assumptions of beam torsion which are independent of cross-section geometry. These assumptions essentially are: no in-plane deformation, constant torsion and free warping. Thus it is possible to achieve numerical solutions of high accuracy for arbitrary cross-sections. Due to the direct link to three-dimensional continuum mechanics, it is possible to extend the range of torsion analysis to sections which are composed of different materials or even to heterogeneous beams on a high scale of resolution. A brief study follows to validate the implementation and results are compared to analytical solutions.}, subject = {Angewandte Informatik}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{EckardtKoenke, author = {Eckardt, Stefan and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, title = {ENERGY RELEASE CONTROL FOR NONLINEAR MESOSCALE SIMULATIONS}, editor = {G{\"u}rlebeck, Klaus and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, organization = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, issn = {1611-4086}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.2841}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170314-28414}, pages = {5}, abstract = {In nonlinear simulations the loading is, in general, applied in an incremental way. Path-following algorithms are used to trace the equilibrium path during the failure process. Standard displacement controlled solution strategies fail if snap-back phenomena occur. In this contribution, a path-following algorithm based on the dissipation of the inelastic energy is presented which allows for the simulation of snap-backs. Since the constraint is defined in terms of the internal energy, the algorithm is not restricted to continuum damage models. Furthermore, no a priori knowledge about the final damage distribution is required. The performance of the proposed algorithm is illustrated using nonlinear mesoscale simulations.}, subject = {Angewandte Informatik}, language = {en} } @article{Lahmer, author = {Lahmer, Tom}, title = {Crack identification in hydro-mechanical systems with applications to gravity water dams}, series = {Inverse Problems in Science and Engineering}, journal = {Inverse Problems in Science and Engineering}, pages = {1083 -- 1101}, abstract = {Crack identification in hydro-mechanical systems with applications to gravity water dams}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @article{LutherKoenke, author = {Luther, Torsten and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, title = {Coupled cohesive zone representations from 3D quasicontinuum simulation on aluminum grain boundaries}, series = {International Journal for Multiscale Computational Engineering}, journal = {International Journal for Multiscale Computational Engineering}, abstract = {Coupled cohesive zone representations from 3D quasicontinuum simulation on aluminum grain boundaries}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{BrehmZabelBucheretal., author = {Brehm, Maik and Zabel, Volkmar and Bucher, Christian and Ribeiro, D.}, title = {AN AUTOMATIC MODE SELECTION STRATEGY FOR MODEL UPDATING USING THE MODAL ASSURANCE CRITERION AND MODAL STRAIN ENERGIES}, editor = {G{\"u}rlebeck, Klaus and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, organization = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, issn = {1611-4086}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.2833}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170314-28330}, pages = {18}, abstract = {In the context of finite element model updating using vibration test data, natural frequencies and mode shapes are used as validation criteria. Consequently, the order of natural frequencies and mode shapes is important. As only limited spatial information is available and noise is present in the measurements, the automatic selection of the most likely numerical mode shape corresponding to a measured mode shape is a difficult task. The most common criterion to indicate corresponding mode shapes is the modal assurance criterion. Unfortunately, this criterion fails in certain cases. In this paper, the pure mathematical modal assurance criterion will be enhanced by additional physical information of the numerical model in terms of modal strain energies. A numerical example and a benchmark study with real measured data are presented to show the advantages of the enhanced energy based criterion in comparison to the traditional modal assurance criterion.}, subject = {Angewandte Informatik}, language = {en} } @article{BrehmZabelBucher, author = {Brehm, Maik and Zabel, Volkmar and Bucher, Christian}, title = {An automatic mode pairing strategy using an enhanced modal assurance citerion based on modal strain energies}, series = {Journal of Sound and Vibration}, journal = {Journal of Sound and Vibration}, doi = {10.1016/j.jsv.2010.07.006}, pages = {5375 -- 5392}, abstract = {In the context of finite element model updating using output-only vibration test data, natural frequencies and mode shapes are used as validation criteria. Consequently, the correct pairing of experimentally obtained and numerically derived natural frequencies and mode shapes is important. In many cases, only limited spatial information is available and noise is present in the measurements. Therefore, the automatic selection of the most likely numerical mode shape corresponding to a particular experimentally identified mode shape can be a difficult task. The most common criterion for indicating corresponding mode shapes is the modal assurance criterion. Unfortunately, this criterion fails in certain cases and is not reliable for automatic approaches. In this paper, the purely mathematical modal assurance criterion will be enhanced by additional physical information from the numerical model in terms of modal strain energies. A numerical example and a benchmark study with experimental data are presented to show the advantages of the proposed energy-based criterion in comparison to the traditional modal assurance criterion.}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Luther2010, author = {Luther, Torsten}, title = {Adaptation of atomistic and continuum methods for multiscale simulation of quasi-brittle intergranular damage}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.1436}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20101101-15245}, school = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, year = {2010}, abstract = {The numerical simulation of damage using phenomenological models on the macroscale was state of the art for many decades. However, such models are not able to capture the complex nature of damage, which simultaneously proceeds on multiple length scales. Furthermore, these phenomenological models usually contain damage parameters, which are physically not interpretable. Consequently, a reasonable experimental determination of these parameters is often impossible. In the last twenty years, the ongoing advance in computational capacities provided new opportunities for more and more detailed studies of the microstructural damage behavior. Today, multiphase models with several million degrees of freedom enable for the numerical simulation of micro-damage phenomena in naturally heterogeneous materials. Therewith, the application of multiscale concepts for the numerical investigation of the complex nature of damage can be realized. The presented thesis contributes to a hierarchical multiscale strategy for the simulation of brittle intergranular damage in polycrystalline materials, for example aluminum. The numerical investigation of physical damage phenomena on an atomistic microscale and the integration of these physically based information into damage models on the continuum meso- and macroscale is intended. Therefore, numerical methods for the damage analysis on the micro- and mesoscale including the scale transfer are presented and the transition to the macroscale is discussed. The investigation of brittle intergranular damage on the microscale is realized by the application of the nonlocal Quasicontinuum method, which fully describes the material behavior by atomistic potential functions, but reduces the number of atomic degrees of freedom by introducing kinematic couplings. Since this promising method is applied only by a limited group of researchers for special problems, necessary improvements have been realized in an own parallelized implementation of the 3D nonlocal Quasicontinuum method. The aim of this implementation was to develop and combine robust and efficient algorithms for a general use of the Quasicontinuum method, and therewith to allow for the atomistic damage analysis in arbitrary grain boundary configurations. The implementation is applied in analyses of brittle intergranular damage in ideal and nonideal grain boundary models of FCC aluminum, considering arbitrary misorientations. From the microscale simulations traction separation laws are derived, which describe grain boundary decohesion on the mesoscale. Traction separation laws are part of cohesive zone models to simulate the brittle interface decohesion in heterogeneous polycrystal structures. 2D and 3D mesoscale models are presented, which are able to reproduce crack initiation and propagation along cohesive interfaces in polycrystals. An improved Voronoi algorithm is developed in 2D to generate polycrystal material structures based on arbitrary distribution functions of grain size. The new model is more flexible in representing realistic grain size distributions. Further improvements of the 2D model are realized by the implementation and application of an orthotropic material model with Hill plasticity criterion to grains. The 2D and 3D polycrystal models are applied to analyze crack initiation and propagation in statically loaded samples of aluminum on the mesoscale without the necessity of initial damage definition.}, subject = {Mechanik}, language = {en} } @article{NguyenThanhThaiHoangNguyenXuanetal., author = {Nguyen-Thanh, Nhon and Thai-Hoang, C. and Nguyen-Xuan, Hung and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {A smoothed finite element method for the static and free vibration analysis of shells}, series = {Journal of Civil Engineering and Architecture}, journal = {Journal of Civil Engineering and Architecture}, pages = {13 -- 25}, abstract = {A smoothed finite element method for the static and free vibration analysis of shells}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} } @inproceedings{NguyenThanhRabczuk, author = {Nguyen-Thanh, Nhon and Rabczuk, Timon}, title = {A SMOOTHED FINITE ELEMENT METHOD FOR THE STATIC AND FREE VIBRATION ANALYSIS OF SHELLS}, editor = {G{\"u}rlebeck, Klaus and K{\"o}nke, Carsten}, organization = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, issn = {1611-4086}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.2877}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170314-28777}, pages = {24}, abstract = {A four-node quadrilateral shell element with smoothed membrane-bending based on Mindlin-Reissner theory is proposed. The element is a combination of a plate bending and membrane element. It is based on mixed interpolation where the bending and membrane stiffness matrices are calculated on the boundaries of the smoothing cells while the shear terms are approximated by independent interpolation functions in natural coordinates. The proposed element is robust, computationally inexpensive and free of locking. Since the integration is done on the element boundaries for the bending and membrane terms, the element is more accurate than the MITC4 element for distorted meshes. This will be demonstrated for several numerical examples.}, subject = {Angewandte Informatik}, language = {en} } @article{NguyenXuanRabczukNguyenThanhetal., author = {Nguyen-Xuan, Hung and Rabczuk, Timon and Nguyen-Thanh, Nhon and Nguyen-Thoi, T. and Bordas, St{\´e}phane Pierre Alain}, title = {A node-based smoothed finite element method (NS-FEM) for analysis of Reissner-Mindlin plates}, series = {Computational Mechanics}, journal = {Computational Mechanics}, pages = {679 -- 701}, abstract = {A node-based smoothed finite element method (NS-FEM) for analysis of Reissner-Mindlin plates}, subject = {Angewandte Mathematik}, language = {en} }