Chad M. Landis

2papers

2 Papers

13.5CEMar 26
A Monolithic Computational Homogenization Framework for Nearly Incompressible Magnetoelastic Composites

L. River Spencer, Manuel K. Rausch, Chad M. Landis et al.

Magneto-active elastomers exhibit large, nonlinear deformations under combined mechanical loading and magnetic fields, and their effective behavior is strongly governed by microstructural heterogeneity. Predictive modeling of these materials is challenging because their response involves strong magneto-mechanical coupling, large deformations, and the nearly incompressible behavior of elastomeric matrices. Existing multiscale approaches often rely on staggered strategies or formulations that do not robustly treat near-incompressibility in strongly coupled settings. This work presents a fully coupled computational homogenization framework for nearly incompressible magnetoelastic composites in which the mechanical deformation and magnetostatic fields are solved monolithically on a representative volume element (RVE). The microscale problem uses a mixed finite-element discretization with Lagrangian displacement degrees of freedom and a N'ed'elec-based magnetic vector potential, enabling a curl-conforming representation of magnetic induction together with periodic boundary constraints for both mechanical and magnetic fields. Near-incompressibility is treated using J-bar stabilization, in which the volumetric response is controlled by the cell-averaged dilatation while the isochoric response is evaluated using a scaled deformation gradient. The constitutive behavior is derived from an additive free-energy decomposition with hyperelastic, vacuum magnetic, and saturation-type magnetization contributions. The resulting formulation enables robust three-dimensional RVE simulations of heterogeneous magneto-elastic composites with complex particle distributions under large deformations and strong coupling. Numerical examples show how particle interactions, microstructural arrangement, and inclusion compressibility influence deformation patterns and the effective magneto-mechanical response.

NAApr 22, 2019
An isogeometric finite element formulation for phase transitions on deforming surfaces

Christopher Zimmermann, Deepesh Toshniwal, Chad M. Landis et al.

This paper presents a general theory and isogeometric finite element implementation for studying mass conserving phase transitions on deforming surfaces. The mathematical problem is governed by two coupled fourth-order nonlinear partial differential equations (PDEs) that live on an evolving two-dimensional manifold. For the phase transitions, the PDE is the Cahn-Hilliard equation for curved surfaces, which can be derived from surface mass balance in the framework of irreversible thermodynamics. For the surface deformation, the PDE is the (vector-valued) Kirchhoff-Love thin shell equation. Both PDEs can be efficiently discretized using $C^1$-continuous interpolations without derivative degrees-of-freedom (dofs). Structured NURBS and unstructured spline spaces with pointwise $C^1$-continuity are utilized for these interpolations. The resulting finite element formulation is discretized in time by the generalized-$α$ scheme with adaptive time-stepping, and it is fully linearized within a monolithic Newton-Raphson approach. A curvilinear surface parameterization is used throughout the formulation to admit general surface shapes and deformations. The behavior of the coupled system is illustrated by several numerical examples exhibiting phase transitions on deforming spheres, tori and double-tori.