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This book contains a systematical analysis of geometrical
situations leading to contact pairs -- point-to-surface,
surface-to-surface, point-to-curve, curve-to-curve and
curve-to-surface. Each contact pair is inherited with a special
coordinate system based on its geometrical properties such as a
Gaussian surface coordinate system or a Serret-Frenet curve
coordinate system. The formulation in a covariant form allows in a
straightforward fashion to consider various constitutive relations
for a certain pair such as anisotropy for both frictional and
structural parts. Then standard methods well known in computational
contact mechanics such as penalty, Lagrange multiplier methods,
combination of both and others are formulated in these coordinate
systems. Such formulations require then the powerful apparatus of
differential geometry of surfaces and curves as well as of convex
analysis. The final goals of such transformations are then
ready-for-implementation numerical algorithms within the finite
element method including any arbitrary discretization techniques
such as high order and isogeometric finite elements, which are most
convenient for the considered geometrical situation. The book
proposes a consistent study of geometry and kinematics, variational
formulations, constitutive relations for surfaces and
discretization techniques for all considered geometrical pairs and
contains the associated numerical analysis as well as some new
analytical results in contact mechanics.
This book contains a systematical analysis of geometrical
situations leading to contact pairs -- point-to-surface,
surface-to-surface, point-to-curve, curve-to-curve and
curve-to-surface. Each contact pair is inherited with a special
coordinate system based on its geometrical properties such as a
Gaussian surface coordinate system or a Serret-Frenet curve
coordinate system. The formulation in a covariant form allows in a
straightforward fashion to consider various constitutive relations
for a certain pair such as anisotropy for both frictional and
structural parts. Then standard methods well known in computational
contact mechanics such as penalty, Lagrange multiplier methods,
combination of both and others are formulated in these coordinate
systems. Such formulations require then the powerful apparatus of
differential geometry of surfaces and curves as well as of convex
analysis. The final goals of such transformations are then
ready-for-implementation numerical algorithms within the finite
element method including any arbitrary discretization techniques
such as high order and isogeometric finite elements, which are most
convenient for the considered geometrical situation. The book
proposes a consistent study of geometry and kinematics, variational
formulations, constitutive relations for surfaces and
discretization techniques for all considered geometrical pairs and
contains the associated numerical analysis as well as some new
analytical results in contact mechanics.
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