A Spectral Finite Element Approach to Modeling Soft Solids Excited with High-Frequency Harmonic Loads.

Comput Methods Appl Mech Eng

University of Pittsburgh, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 936 Benedum Hall, 3700 OHara Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, United States.

Published: January 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study introduces a method for efficiently and accurately analyzing soft solids subjected to harmonic excitation using high-order spectral finite elements, addressing common numerical errors linked to high frequencies.
  • High-order polynomial elements help reduce errors from the Helmholtz-type equations but also require careful handling to avoid issues like Runge's phenomenon, leading to the use of spectral element techniques.
  • Results show that using high-order elements can minimize the number of required degrees of freedom for accuracy, but the ideal element order varies significantly based on the wave number of the excitation.

Article Abstract

An approach for efficient and accurate finite element analysis of harmonically excited soft solids using high-order spectral finite elements is presented and evaluated. The Helmholtz-type equations used to model such systems suffer from additional numerical error known as pollution when excitation frequency becomes high relative to stiffness (i.e. high wave number), which is the case, for example, for soft tissues subject to ultrasound excitations. The use of high-order polynomial elements allows for a reduction in this pollution error, but requires additional consideration to counteract Runge's phenomenon and/or poor linear system conditioning, which has led to the use of spectral element approaches. This work examines in detail the computational benefits and practical applicability of high-order spectral elements for such problems. The spectral elements examined are tensor product elements (i.e. quad or brick elements) of high-order Lagrangian polynomials with non-uniformly distributed Gauss-Lobatto-Legendre nodal points. A shear plane wave example is presented to show the dependence of the accuracy and computational expense of high-order elements on wave number. Then, a convergence study for a viscoelastic acoustic-structure interaction finite element model of an actual ultrasound driven vibroacoustic experiment is shown. The number of degrees of freedom required for a given accuracy level was found to consistently decrease with increasing element order. However, the computationally optimal element order was found to strongly depend on the wave number.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3065030PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cma.2010.09.015DOI Listing

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