Atena Theory
Atena Theory
Atena Theory
Na Hrebenkach 55
150 00 Prague
Czech Republic
Phone: +420 220 610 018
E-mail: cervenka@cervenka.cz
Web: http://www.cervenka.cz
Theory
Written by
Vladimr ervenka, Libor Jendele,
and Jan ervenka
Trademarks:
ATENA is registered trademark of Vladimir Cervenka.
Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.
Copyright 2000-2014 ervenka Consulting s.r.o.
Contents
1
1.1
Introduction
1.2
1.3
Stress Tensors
1.4
Strain Tensors
1.5
Constitutive Tensor
1.6
1.7
1.8
1.9
10
11
1.10
12
1.11
References
13
CONSTITUTIVE MODELS
15
2.1
15
15
18
24
25
25
27
29
29
30
30
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31
32
33
2.2
FracturePlastic Constitutive Model (CC3DCementitious,
CC3DNonLinCementitious, CC3DNonLinCementitious2,
CC3DNonLinCementitious2User, CC3DNonLinCementitious2Variable,
CC3DNonLinCementitious2SHCC, CC3DNonLinCementitious3)
34
2.2.1 Introduction
34
35
35
38
41
43
47
47
48
2.2.10 Fatigue
48
51
54
2.3
58
2.4
61
2.5
62
2.6
62
2.7
66
2.7.1 Introduction
66
66
67
68
68
2.8
ii
69
70
71
73
2.9
73
74
2.10
References
78
FINITE ELEMENTS
83
3.1
Introduction
83
3.2
85
3.3
89
3.4
95
3.5
3D Solid Elements
97
3.6
Spring Element
108
3.7
110
110
113
3.8
External Cable
115
3.9
116
3.10
Interface Element
118
3.11
122
3.12
124
126
131
132
133
134
139
3.12.7 Transformation of the Original DOFs to Displacements at the Top and Bottom of the
Element Nodal Coordinate System
139
143
3.13
145
147
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iii
3.14
153
3.15
154
156
157
3.16
163
3.17
164
164
167
167
174
3.18
176
3.19
177
3.20
178
3.21
References
181
183
4.1
Linear Solvers
183
184
185
185
189
4.2
191
4.3
193
4.4
Arc-Length Method
194
197
197
198
199
200
4.5
200
4.6
Parameter
201
iv
4.7
203
4.8
References
206
209
5.1
209
209
5.2
211
5.3
212
5.4
213
5.5
215
5.6
References
223
DURABILITY ANALYSIS
225
6.1
Carbonation
226
227
6.2
Chlorides
227
6.3
229
6.4
References
231
TRANSPORT ANALYSIS
233
7.1
236
7.2
242
243
243
244
7.3
244
7.4
259
259
260
260
7.5
261
7.6
References
263
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DYNAMIC ANALYSIS
265
8.1
Structural Damping
268
269
9.1
269
270
270
271
272
274
9.2
References
274
10
275
10.1
275
276
278
10.2
281
281
282
283
284
10.3
INDEX
vi
References
285
287
equations, including quadratic terms, has to be employed but constitutive equations are
linear. This group of non-linear analysis includes most stability problems.
The last group uses non-linear both material and geometric equations. In addition, it is usually
not possible to suddenly apply the total value of load but it is necessary to integrate in time
increments (or loading increments). This is the most accurate and general approach but
unfortunately is also the most complicated.
There are two basic possibilities for formulating the general structural behavior based on its
deformed shape:
Lagrange formulation:
In this case we are interested in the behavior of infinitesimal particles of volume dV . Their
volume will vary dependent on a loading level applied and, consequently, on the amount of
current deformations. This method is usually used to calculate civil engineering structures.
Euler formulation:
The essential idea of Euler's formulation is to study the "flow" of the structural material through
infinitesimal and fixed volumes of the structure. This is the favorite formulation for fluid
analysis, analysis of gas flow, tribulation etc. where large material flows exist.
For structural analysis, however, Lagrangian formulation is better, and therefore attention will be
restricted to this. Two forms of the Lagrangian formulation are possible. The governing
equations can either be written with respect to the undeformed original configuration at time t =
0 or with respect to the most recent deformed configuration at time t. The former case is called
Total Lagrangian formulation (TL) while the latter one is called the Updated Lagrangian
formulation (UL).
It is difficult to say which formulation is better because both have their advantages and
drawbacks. Usually it depends on a particular structure being analyzed and which one to use is a
matter of engineering judgement. Generally, provided the constitutive equations are adequate,
the results for both methods are identical.
ATENA currently uses Updated Lagrangian formulation, (which is described later in this
chapter) and supports the highest, i.e. 3rd level of non-linear behavior. Soon, it should also
support Total Lagrangian formulation.
M1
M0
Configuration t+t
Configuration 0
[ X1, X1,
t+t
M2
Configuration t
X1]
The left superscript denotes the time corresponding to the value of the entity, the left subscript
denotes the configuration with respect to which the value is measured and subscripts on the
right identify the relationships to the coordinate axis. Thus for example t 0t ij denotes
element i , j of stress tensor at time t t with respect to the original (undeformed)
configuration.
For derivatives the abbreviated notation will be used, i.e. all right subscripts that appear after a
comma declare derivatives. For example:
t t
0 i, j
X j
t t
ui
(1.2)
The general governing equations can be derived in the form of a set of partial differential
equations (for example using the displacement method) or an energy approach can be used. The
final results are the same.
One of the most general methods of establishing the governing equations is to apply the principle
of virtual work. There are three basic variants of this:
The principle of virtual displacements,
The principle of virtual forces,
The Clapeyron divergent theorem.
Using the virtual work theorems it is possible to derive several different variation principles
(Lagrange principle, Clapeyron principle, Hellinger-Reissner principle, Hu-Washizu principle
etc.). There are popular especially in linear analysis. They can be used to establish equilibrium
equations, to study possible deformation modes in finite element discretization etc.
Unfortunately in nonlinear analysis they do not always work.
ATENA Theory
In this document all the following derivations will be presented in their displacement form and
consequently the principle of virtual displacements will be used throughout.
The following section deals with the definition of the stress and strain tensors, which are usually
used, in nonlinear analysis. All of them are symmetric.
Sij
0
t
0
t
0
t X i , m mn t X j ,n
(1.3)
where
t
mn is the Cauchy stress tensor at time t ,
0
t X i , m is the derivative of coordinates, ref. (1.5).
0
t
Using inverse transformation, we can express Cauchy stress tensor in terms of the 2nd PiolaKirchhoff stress tensor, i.e.:
mn
t
0
t
t
t
0 X m ,i 0 S mn 0 X n , j
(1.4)
The elements 0t X i ,m are usually collected in the so-called Deformation gradient matrix:
t
0
where:
, 0 , 0
0 0
X1 X 2 X 3
T
X T t X 1 , t X 2 , t X 3
X 0 t X T
(1.5)
The ratio
t det( 0t X )
(1.6)
Expression (1.6) is based on the assumption that the weight of an infinitesimal particle is
constant during the loading process.
Some important properties can be deduced from definition of 2nd Piola-Kirchhoff tensor (1.3):
at time 0, i.e. the undeformed configuration, there is no distinction between 2nd Piola-Kirchhoff
and Cauchy stress tensors because 00 X E , i.e. unity matrix and the density ratio
0
t
= 1.,
2nd Piola-Kirchhoff tensor is an objective entity in the sense that it is independent of any
movement of the body provided the loading conditions are frozen. This is a very important
property. The Cauchy stress tensor does not satisfy this because it is sensitive to the rotation
of the body. It is energetically conjugated with Green-Lagrange tensor described later.
Theyre some other stress tensor commonly used for structural nonlinear analysis, e.g. Jaumann
stress rate tensor (describes stress rate rather than its final values) etc, however they are not used
in ATENA and therefore not described in this document.
t mn
1 u
u
t m t n
2 Xn Xm
(1.7)
t
0 ij
1 t
0 ui , j 0t u j ,i 0t uk ,i 0t uk , j
2
(1.8)
If we calculate the length of an infinitesimal fibber prior and after deformation in the original
coordinates, we get exactly the terms of the Green-Lagrange tensor.
The following equation gives relation between variation of Green-Lagrange and Engineering
strain tensors:
t X m t X n
0
t emn
X i 0 X j
t
0 ij
(1.9)
These are the strain tensors used in ATENA. From the other strain tensors commonly used in
non-linear analysis we can mention Almansi strain tensor, co-rotated logarithmic strain, strain
rate tensor etc.
ATENA Theory
Sij 0t Cijrs 0t rs
(1.10)
t
x t x tC t x t x
0 m ,i 0 n , j 0 ijrs 0 p ,r 0 q ,s
(1.11)
0
0
0
0
t
t xi , m t x j , n t Cmnpq t xr , p t xs , q
(1.12)
Cmnpq
Cijrs
0
t
Using constitutive tensor (1.11) and Almansi strains tt , we can write for Cauchy stresses (with
respect to coordinates at time t ):
t
ij tt Cijrs tt rs
(1.13)
mn t0 xi ,m t0 x j ,n 0t ij
(1.14)
1 t
t
t
t
t ui , j t u j ,i t uk ,i t uk , j
2
(1.15)
t
t
t
t ij
The equation (1.13) is equivalent to the equation (1.10) that was written for original
configuration of the structure. It is very important to know, with respect to which coordinate
system the stress, strain and constitutive tensors are defined, as the actual value can significantly
differ. ATENA currently assumes that all these tensors are defined at coordinates at time t .
t dt
0
Sij
t dt
0
ij dV 0t dt R
(1.16)
t dt
t
Sij
t dt
t
ij dV tt dt R
(1.17)
where 0V , t V denotes the structure volume corresponding to time 0 and t and t dt R is the total
virtual work of the external forces. The symbol denotes variation of the entity. Since energy
must be invariant with respect to the reference coordinate system, (1.16) and (1.17) must lead to
identical results.
Substituting expressions for strain and stress tensors the final governing equation for structure
can be derived. They are summarized in (1.18) through (1.29). Note that the relationships are
expressed with respect to configurations at an arbitrary time t and an iteration ( i ) . Typically, the
time t may by 0 , in which case we have Total Lagrangian formulation or t t (i 1) , in which
case we have Updated Lagrangian formulation, where some terms can be omitted. ATENA also
support semi Updated Lagrangian formulation, when t conforms to time at the beginning of
time increment, i.e. the beginning of load step. The following table compares the abovementioned formulations:
Table 1.6-1 Comparison of different Lagrangian formulation.
Lagrangian
formulation
Transform each
iteration
Transform
stress and
strain for
output
Calculate
u for t eij
t t ( i 1)
t i, j
IP state
variables
Material
properties
IP state
variables
Material
properties
Total
No
No
No
No
Yes
Yes
Updated
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
SemiUpdated
No
No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Governing equations:
t t
t
Sij( i ) t tt ij( i ) t dV t t R
(1.18)
nd
Sij( i )
t tt ij( i )
t t
t ( i ) t t ( i )
t
t t i ,m
t mn t t
1 t t ( i )
t ui, j
2
t t ( i )
t i, j
x (ji,n)
t t ( i ) t t ( i )
t k ,i
t k, j
(1.19)
(1.20)
S t tt Sij(i 1) t Sij( i )
t t ( i )
t ij
t t ( i 1)
t ij
(1.21)
t ij( i )
(1.22)
ATENA Theory
(i )
t ij
1
t ui(,ij) t ui(,ij) t tt uk(i,i1) t uk(i,)j t tt uk(i,j1) t uk(i,i)
2
(1.23)
1
t uk(i,i) t uk(i,)j
2
(1.24)
t Cijrs t rs( i )
(1.25)
ij( i )
(i )
where t Cijrs
is tangent material tensors and noting that t tt ij( i ) t ij( i ) , an incremental form of
(1.18) can be derived:
Cijrs
(i )
t ij
t t
t
(1.26)
nd
Cijrs
(i )
t ij
(1.27)
t t
t t
t
t t
t
Sij( i 1) tij( i ) dV
t
(1.28)
Sij( i 1) t eij( i ) dV
t
Note that the term t eij( i ) t eij is constant, i.e. independent of t ui( i ) , hence it is on RHS of
(1.28).
t t
fbi t u i dV
t
t t
fsi t u i dS t
t
2 t tt ui( i 1)
dV
t 2
(1.29)
where fbi and fsi are body and surface forces, t S and t V denotes integration with respect to the
surface with the prescribed boundary forces and volume of the structure (at time and t ).
The 1st integral in (1.29) accounts for external work on surface (e.g. external forces), the second
one for work done by body forces (e.g. weight) and the last one accounts for work done by
inertia forces, which are applicable only for dynamic analysis problems).
At this point, all the relationships for incremental analysis have been presented. In order to
proceed further, the problem must be discretized and solved by iterations (described in Chapter
Solution of Nonlinear Equations).
ui h j t uij
(1.30)
where
j is index for finite element node, j 1...n ,
n is number of element nodes,
h j are interpolation function usually grouped in matrix H j h1 ( r , s, t ), h2 ( r , s, t ).....hn ( r , s, t ) ,
r , s, t are local element coordinates.
The interpolation functions h j are usually created in the way that h j 1 at node j and h j 0 at
any other element nodes.
Combining (1.30) and equation for strain definition (1.8) it can be derived:
t t
t
( i 1) t t ( i )
( i ) t BL 0 t tt BL( i11) t tt BNL
U
(1.31)
where
t t ( i )
is vector of Green-Lagrange strains,
t
t t
U ( i ) is vector of displacements,
st
t t ( i 1) t t ( i 1)
two of
t BL 0 ,
t BL1 ,
t BNL are linear strain-displacements transformation matrices (the 1
them) and nonlinear strain-displacements transformation matrix (the last one).
Similar equation can be written also for stress tensor.
t t
t
S (i )
t t
t
C (i )
t t
t
(i )
(1.32)
where:
t t ( i )
is vector of 2nd Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor and
tS
t t
t
Applying the above discretisation for each finite element of the structure and assembling the
results the continuum based governing equations in (1.28) can be re-written in the following
form:
t
t 2
t t
( i 1)
U ( i ) ( t K L t tt K NL
) t tU ( i ) t t R t t F ( i 1)
(1.33)
where
t
t t
t
( i 1)
is the nonlinear strain incremental stiffness matrix,
K NL
t t ( i )
U is the vector of nodal accelerations,
t 2
ATENA Theory
t t
(i )
Note that (1.33) contains also inertial term needed only for dynamic analysis. Finite element
matrices in (1.33) and corresponding analytical expressions are summarized:
t
K L U ( i ) t BLT t C t BL dV U ( i )
t
t t
t
t t
( i 1)
U ( i )
K NL
t
V
F ( i 1)
t
t t
t 2
t t
t
T t t
t
t t
t
( i 1) T
BNL
Sij( i 1) dV
t
f A dV dA
t t
t
t t
t
Sij( i 1)
t t
t
( i 1)
BNL
dV U ( i )
t
V
t t
t
Sij( i 1) tij( i ) dV
Sij( i 1) t eij( i ) dV
t
(1.34)
T t t
t
f B dV t t R
U ( i ) H T t H dV 2
t
t
V
t t
t t ui( i )
t t ui( i ) t
dV
2
2
t
t
U (i )
t t
that in order not to loose any internal energy of the structure, the displacements over the whole
structure must be continuous. The continuity within finite elements is trivial. Use of continuous
approximation functions h j ensures this requirement. A bit more complicated situation is on
boundaries between adjacent elements, however, if the adjacent elements are of the same type,
their displacements are also continuous. Note that there exist are some techniques that alleviate
the continuity requirement but in ATENA they are not used.
Unlike displacements, stress and strain field is typically discontinuous. Moreover, a structure is
investigated within so-called material (or integral) points, which are points located somewhere
within each element. Their position is derived from requirement to minimize the approximation
error. In other words, standard finite element method provides stress and strain values only at
those material points and these values must be later somehow extrapolated into element nodal
points. Often, some sort of smoothing is required in order to remove the mentioned stress and
strain discontinuity. This section describes, how this goal is done in ATENA.
There are two steps in the process of stress and strain smoothing: 1/ extrapolation of stress and
strain from material points to element nodes and 2/ averaging of stress in global node. The whole
10
technique is described briefly. All details and derivations can be found e.g. (ZIENKIEWICZ,
TAYLOR 1989) and ERVENKA et. al. 1993.
where the 2nd index indicates element node number. Let us also define a vector
Pxx ,i hi xx d e
e
(1.35)
The nodal value xx (with values of xx at nodes i =1..n ) is then calculated as follows:
xx M Pxx
(1.36)
M ij hi h j d e
(1.37)
inv
where:
e
M ij hi hk ij d e
e
(1.38)
k 1, n
k 1, n
M ij hi ij d
e
(1.39)
ATENA Theory
ek
(1.40)
ek
11
u
u N
uD
(1.41)
K NN
K
DN
K ND uN RN
K DD uD RD
(1.42)
ATENA software supports that any constrained degree of freedom can be a linear combination
of other degrees of freedom plus some constant term:
(1.43)
where uDi ,0 is the constant term and k are coefficients of the linear combination. Of course, the
equation (1.43) can include also the term
u
l
l
D
term.
The free degree of freedom are then solved by
uN K NN
K ND RD
(1.44)
RD K DN uN K DD uD
(1.45)
The ATENA simple support boundary conditions mean that the boundary conditions use only
constant terms are uDi ,0 , (i.e. k 0 ). The complex support boundary conditions use the full
form of (1.43).
The boundary conditions as described above allow to specify for one degree of freedom either
Dirichlet, or von Neumann boundary condition, but not both of them the same time. It comes
from the nature of finite element method. However, ATENA can deal also this case of more
12
1.11 References
BATHE, K.J. (1982), Finite Element Procedures In Engineering Analysis,
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey 07632, ISBN 0-13-317305-4.
Prentice-Hall, Inc.,
ERVENKA, J., KEATING, S.C., AND FELIPPA, C.A. (1993), Comparison of strain
recovery techniques for the mixed iterative method, Communications in Numerical Methods in
Engineering, Vol. 9, 925-932.
ZIENKIEWICZ, O.C., TAYLOR, R.L., (1989), The Finite Element Method, Volume 1,
McGraw-Hill Book Company, ISBN 0-07-084174-8.
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13
14
2 CONSTITUTIVE MODELS
2.1 Constitutive Model SBETA (CCSbetaMaterial)
2.1.1 Basic Assumptions
2.1.1.1 Stress, Strain, Material Stiffness
The formulation of constitutive relations is considered in the plane stress state. A smeared
approach is used to model the material properties, such as cracks or distributed reinforcement.
This means that material properties defined for a material point are valid within a certain
material volume, which is in this case associated with the entire finite element. The constitutive
model is based on the stiffness and is described by the equation of equilibrium in a material
point:
s De, s x , y , xy , e x , y , xy
T
(2.1)
where s, D and e are a stress vector, a material stiffness matrix and a strain vector, respectively.
The stress and strain vectors are composed of the stress components of the plane stress state
x , y , xy , Fig. 2-1, and the strain components x , y , xy , Fig. 2-2, where xy is the engineering
shear strain. The strains are common for all materials. The stress vector s and the material matrix
D can be decomposed into the material components due to concrete and reinforcement as:
s s c s s , D Dc D s
(2.2)
The stress vector s and both component stress vectors sc , s s are related to the total cross section
area. The concrete stress s c is acting on the material area of concrete A c , which is approximately
set equal to the cross section of the composite material A c A (the area of concrete occupied by
reinforcement is not subtracted).
The matrix D has a form of the Hooke's law for either isotropic or orthotropic material, as will be
shown in Section 2.1.11.
ATENA Theory
15
s s s si
(2.3)
i 1
where n is the number of the smeared reinforcement components. For the ith reinforcement, the
global component reinforcement stress ssi is related to the local reinforcement stress si, by the
transformation:
s si T pi si,
(2.4)
Asi
, Asi is the reinforcement cross section area. The local
Ac
16
(2.5)
cos( ) 2
sin( ) 2
2 cos( ) sin( )
2
2
2 cos( ) sin( )
sin( )
cos( )
T
cos( ) sin( ) cos( ) sin( ) cos( )2 sin( ) 2
(2.6)
s ( u ) u , v , uv , s ( x ) x , y , xy
(2.7)
cos( ) 2
sin( ) 2
cos( ) sin( )
2
2
cos( ) sin( )
T
sin( )
cos( )
2 cos( ) sin( ) 2 cos( ) sin( ) cos( ) 2 sin( ) 2
(2.8)
e(u ) u , v , uv , e( x ) x , y , xy .
T
The angles of principal axes of the stresses and strains, Fig. 2-1, Fig. 2-2, are found from the
equations:
tan(2 )
2 xy
x y
, tan(2 )
xy
x y
(2.9)
where is the angle of the first principal stress axis and is the angle of the first principal
strain axis.
In case of isotropic material (un-cracked concrete) the principal directions of the stress and
strains are identical; in case of anisotropic material (cracked concrete) they can be different. The
sign convention for the normal stresses, employed within this program, uses the positive values
for the tensile stress (strain) and negative values for the compressive stress (strain). The shear
stress (strain) is positive if acting upwards on the right face of a unit element.
2.1.1.2 Concept of Material Model SBETA
The material model SBETA includes the following effects of concrete behavior:
non-linear behavior in compression including hardening and softening,
fracture of concrete in tension based on the nonlinear fracture mechanics,
biaxial strength failure criterion,
reduction of compressive strength after cracking,
tension stiffening effect,
reduction of the shear stiffness after cracking (variable shear retention),
two crack models: fixed crack direction and rotated crack direction.
Perfect bond between concrete and reinforcement is assumed within the smeared concept. No
bond slip can be directly modeled except for the one included inherently in the tension stiffening.
However, on a macro-level a relative slip displacement of reinforcement with respect to concrete
over a certain distance can arise, if concrete is cracked or crushed. This corresponds to a real
mechanism of bond failure in case of the bars with ribs.
The reinforcement in both forms, smeared and discrete, is in the uniaxial stress state and its
constitutive law is a multi-linear stress-strain diagram.
ATENA Theory
17
The material matrix is derived using the nonlinear elastic approach. In this approach the elastic
constants are derived from a stress-strain function called here the equivalent uniaxial law. This
approach is similar to the nonlinear hypoelastic constitutive model, except that different laws are
used here for loading and unloading, causing the dissipation of energy exhausted for the damage
of material. The detailed treatment of the theoretical background of this subject can be found, for
example, in the book CHEN (1982). This approach can be also regarded as an isotropic damage
model, with the unloading modulus (see next section) representing the damage modulus.
The name SBETA comes from the former program, in which this material model was first used.
It means the abbreviation for the analysis of reinforced concrete in German language StahlBETonAnalyse.
eq
ci
(2.10)
Eci
The equivalent uniaxial strain can be considered as the strain, that would be produced by the
stress ci in a uniaxial test with modulus Eci associated with the direction i. Within this
assumption, the nonlinearity representing a damage is caused only by the governing stress ci .
The details can be found in CHEN (1982).
The complete equivalent uniaxial stress-strain diagram for concrete is shown in Fig. 2-4.
18
Unloading is a linear function to the origin. An example of the unloading point U is shown in
ef
Fig. 2-4. Thus, the relation between stress c and strain eq is not unique and depends on a load
history. A change from loading to unloading occurs, when the increment of the effective strain
changes the sign. If subsequent reloading occurs the linear unloading path is followed until the
last loading point U is reached again. Then, the loading function is resumed.
The peak values of stress in compression fcef and in tension ftef are calculated according to the
biaxial stress state as will be shown in Sec.2.1.5. Thus, the equivalent uniaxial stress-strain law
reflects the biaxial stress state.
The above defined stress-strain relation is used to calculate the elastic modulus for the material
stiffness matrices, Sect. 2.1.11. The secant modulus is calculated as
c
(2.11)
eq
It is used in the constitutive equation to calculate stresses for the given strain state, Sect. 2.1.12.
s
Ec
The tangent modulus Ect is used in the material matrix Dc for construction of an element stiffness
matrix for the iterative solution. The tangent modulus is the slope of the stress-strain curve at a
given strain. It is always positive. In cases when the slope of the curve is less then the minimum
value Emint the value of the tangent modulus is set Ect = Emint. This occurs in the softening ranges
and near the compressive peak.
Detail description of the stress-strain law is given in the following subsections.
2.1.2.2 Tension before Cracking
The behavior of concrete in tension without cracks is assumed linear elastic. Ec is the initial
elastic modulus of concrete, f t 'ef is the effective tensile strength derived from the biaxial failure
function, Section 2.1.5.2.
c ef Ec eq , 0 c ft ' ef
(2.12)
ATENA Theory
19
f t ' ef
w 3
w w
1 c1 exp c2 1 c13 exp c2 ,
wc wc
wc
wc 5.14
(2.13)
Gf
f t ' ef
where w is the crack opening, wc is the crack opening at the complete release of stress, is the
normal stress in the crack (crack cohesion). Values of the constants are, c1 =3, c2 =6.93. Gf is the
fracture energy needed to create a unit area of stress-free crack, f t ' ef is the effective tensile
strength derived from a failure function, Eq.(2.22). The crack opening displacement w is derived
from strains according to the crack band theory in Eq.(2.18).
(2) Linear Crack Opening Law
c ef
ft ' ef
20
2G
ft '
wc w , wc ' f
wc
ft
(2.14)
c1
f1
ft
' ef
, c2
f2
ft
' ef
, wc
2G f
f1 f 2
ATENA Theory
21
Parameters: c1
f1
ft
' ef
, c2
f2
f t ' ef
Parameters c1 and c2 are relative positions of stress levels, and c3 is the end strain.
2.1.2.4 Compression before Peak Stress
The formula recommended by CEB-FIP Model Code 90 has been adopted for the ascending
branch of the concrete stress-strain law in compression, Fig. 2-10. This formula enables wide
range of curve forms, from linear to curved, and is appropriate for normal as well as high
strength concrete.
c ef f c ' ef
kx x 2
,x ,k o
c
Ec
1 (k 2) x
(2.15)
Parameter k may have any positive value greater than or equal 1. Examples: k=1. linear, k=2. parabola.
As a consequence of the above assumption, distributed damage is considered before the peak
stress is reached. Contrary to the localized damage, which is considered after the peak.
22
The fictitious compression plane model is based on the assumption, that compression failure is
localized in a plane normal to the direction of compressive principal stress. All post-peak
compressive displacements and energy dissipation are localized in this plane. It is assumed that
this displacement is independent on the size of the structure. This hypothesis is supported by
experiments conducted by Van MIER (1986).
This assumption is analogous to the Fictitious Crack Theory for tension, where the shape of the
crack-opening law and the fracture energy are defined and are considered as material properties.
d c
wd
L'd
(2.16)
ATENA Theory
23
4 noded element
y
crack
direction
2
1
Lc
Lt
Lt Lt , Ld Ld
'
1 ( max 1)
24
'
45
0; 45
(2.17)
An angle is the minimal angle ( min 1 , 2 ) between the direction of the normal to the failure
plane and element sides. In case of a general quadrilateral element the element sides directions
are calculated as average side directions for the two opposite edges. The above formula is a
linear interpolation between the factor 1.0 for the direction parallel with element sides, and
max , for the direction inclined at 45o. The recommended (and default) value of max =1.5.
(2.18)
where cr is the crack opening strain, which is equal to the strain normal to the crack direction in
the cracked state after the complete stress release.
ATENA Theory
25
1 3.65a '
f c , a c1
2
(1 a )
c2
(2.19)
where c1 , c 2 are the principal stresses in concrete and fc is the uniaxial cylinder strength. In
the biaxial stress state, the strength of concrete is predicted under the assumption of a
proportional stress path.
In the tension-compression state, the failure function continues linearly from the point
c1 0 , c 2 f c' into the tension-compression region with the linearly decreasing strength:
f c ' ef f c' rec ,
rec (1 5.3278
c1
f c'
),
(2.20)
where rec is the reduction factor of the compressive strength in the principal direction 2 due to
the tensile stress in the principal direction 1.
2.1.5.2 Tensile Failure
In the tension-tension state, the tensile strength is constant and equal to the uniaxial tensile
strength ft. In the tension-compression state, the tensile strength is reduced by the relation:
f t ' ef f t ' ret
(2.21)
where ret is the reduction factor of the tensile strength in the direction 1 due to the compressive
stress in the direction 2. The reduction function has one of the following forms, Fig. 2-15.
ret 1 0.95
ret
c2
f c'
A ( A 1) B
, B Kx A, x c '2
AB
fc
(2.22)
(2.23)
The relation in Eq.(2.22) is the linear decrease of the tensile strength and (2.23) is the hyperbolic
decrease.
26
Two predefined shapes of the hyperbola are given by the position of an intermediate point r, x.
Constants K and A define the shape of the hyperbola. The values of the constants for the two
positions of the intermediate point are given in the following table.
type
point
parameters
0.5
0.4
0.75
1.125
0.5
0.2
1.0625
6.0208
ATENA Theory
27
28
c1 c 2
2(1 2 )
(2.24)
1000 u
ln
c1
G rg Gc , rg c3
c2
(2.25)
Ec
2(1 )
(2.26)
where Ec is the initial elastic modulus and is the Poisson's ratio. The strain is normal to the
crack direction (the crack opening strain), c1 and c2 are parameters depending on the reinforcing
crossing the crack direction, p is the transformed reinforcing ratio (all reinforcement is
transformed on the crack plane) and c3 is the users scaling factor. By default c3=1. In ATENA
the effect of reinforcement ratio is not considered, and p is assumed to be 0.0.
There is an additional constraint imposed on the shear modulus. The shear stress on the crack
plane uv G is limited by the tensile strength ft. The secant and tangent shear moduli of
cracked concrete are equal.
29
(2.27)
For the zero normal strain, there is no strength reduction, and for the large strains, the
strength is asymptotically approaching to the minimum value f c ' ef cf c' .
1
0
E
Dc
1
0
2
1
1
0 0
(2.28)
In the above E is the concrete elastic modulus derived from the equivalent uniaxial law. The
Poisson's ratio is constant.
2.1.11.2 Cracked Concrete
For the cracked concrete the matrix has the form of the elastic matrix for the orthotropic
material. The matrix is formulated in a coordinate system m1, m2, Fig. 2-16 and Fig. 2-17, which
is coincident with the crack direction. This local coordinate system is referred to the superscript
L later. The direction 1 is normal to the crack and the direction 2 is parallel with the crack. The
definition of the elastic constants for the orthotropic material in the plane stress state follows
from the flexibility relation:
21 0
E
E2
1
1 1
1
12
0 2
(2.29)
2
E
E
2
1
1
0
0
G
First we eliminate the orthotropic Poissons ratios for the cracked concrete, because they are
commonly not known. For this we use the symmetry relation 12 E2 21E1 . Therefore, in (2.29)
there are only three independent elastic constants E1 , E2 , 21 . Assuming that 21 is the
Poisson's ratio of the uncracked concrete and using the symmetry relation, we obtain
12
E1
E2
(2.30)
The stiffness matrix Dc is found as the inverse of the flexibility matrix in (2.30):
0
D c H 1 0 ,
0 0 G
E
1 ,H E1 (1 2 )
E2
L
ATENA Theory
(2.31)
31
In the above relation E2 must be nonzero. If E2 is zero and E1 is nonzero, then an alternative
1 E
formulation is used with the inverse parameter 2 . In case that both elastic modules are
E1
L
The matrix Dc is transformed into the global coordinate system using the transformation matrix
T from (2.8).
D c TT D cL T
(2.32)
The angle is between the global axis x and the 1st material axis m1, which is normal to the
crack, Fig. 2-16.
2.1.11.3 Smeared Reinforcement
cos( i )4
cos( i )2 sin( i ) 2
sin( i ) 4
cos( i ) sin( i )3
cos( i )3 sin( i )
cos( i ) sin( i )3
cos( i ) 2 sin( i ) 2
(2.33)
The angle is between the global axis x and the ith reinforcement direction, and Esi is the elastic
modulus of reinforcement. The reinforcing ratio pi =As/Ac.
2.1.11.4 Material Stiffness of Composite Material
The total material stiffness of the reinforced concrete is the sum of material stiffness of concrete
and smeared reinforcement:
n
D Dc D si
(2.34)
i 1
The material stiffness matrices in the above Subsections 2.1.11.1, 2.1.11.2, 2.1.11.3, 2.1.11.4 are
either secant or tangent, depending on the type of elastic modulus used.
The secant material stiffness matrix is used to calculate the stresses for the given strains, as
shown in Section 2.1.12.
The tangent material stiffness matrix is used to construct the element stiffness matrix.
s c Dc e
32
(2.35)
where Dc is the secant material stiffness matrix from Section 2.1.11 for the uncracked or
cracked concrete depending on the material state. The stress components are calculated in the
global as well as in the local material coordinates (the principal stresses in the uncracked
concrete and the stresses on the crack planes).
The stress in reinforcement and the associated tension stiffening stress is calculated directly from
the strain in the reinforcement direction.
Formula:
f c' 0.85 f cu'
ft 0.24 f
'
2
' 3
cu
Poisson's ratio
0.2
Softening compression
wd 0.0005mm
1 exponential, based on GF
c = 0.8
st 0.
variable (Sect.2.1.7)
linear
The SBETA constitutive model of concrete includes 20 material parameters. These parameters
are specified for the problem under consideration by user. In case of the parameters are not
known automatic generation can be done using the default formulas given in the table above. In
such a case, only the cube strength of concrete fcu (nominal strength) is specified and the
remaining parameters are calculated as functions of the cube strength. The formulas for these
functions are taken from the CEB-FIP Model Code 90 and other research sources.
Used units are MPa.
The parameters not listed in the table have zero default value.
The values of the material parameters can be also influenced by safety considerations. This is
particularly important in cases of a design, where a proper safety margin should be met. For that
reason the choice of material properties depends on the purpose of analysis and the filed of an
application. The typical examples of the application are the design, the simulation of failure and
the research.
ATENA Theory
33
In case of the design application, according to most current standards, the material properties for
calculation of structural resistance (failure load) are considered by minimal values with applied
partial safety factors. The resulting maximum load can be directly compared with the design
loads.
According to some researchers, more appropriate approach would be to consider the average
material properties in nonlinear analysis and to apply a safety factor on the resulting integral
response variable (force, moment). However, this safety format is not yet fully established.
In cases of the simulation of real behavior, the parameters should be chosen as close as possible
to the properties of real materials. The best way is to determine these properties from mechanical
tests on material sample specimens.
return mapping algorithm by WILKINS (1964). This approach guarantees the solution for all
magnitudes of strain increment. From an algorithmic point of view the problem is then
transformed into finding an optimal return point on the failure surface.
The combined algorithm must determine the separation of strains into plastic and fracturing
components, while it must preserve the stress equivalence in both models. The proposed
algorithm is based on a recursive iterative scheme. It can be shown that such a recursive
algorithm cannot reach convergence in certain cases such as, for instance, softening and dilating
materials. For this reason the recursive algorithm is extended by a variation of the relaxation
method to stabilize convergence.
(2.36)
(2.37)
where the increments of plastic strain ijp and fracturing strain ijf must be evaluated based on
the used material models.
f ti 0
(2.38)
It is assumed that strains and stresses are converted into the material directions, which in case of
rotated crack model correspond to the principal directions, and in case of fixed crack model, are
given by the principal directions at the onset of cracking. Therefore, ii t identifies the trial
stress and f ti tensile strength in the material direction i . Prime symbol denotes quantities in the
material directions. The trial stress state is computed by the elastic predictor.
ij t ij n 1 Eijkl kl
(2.39)
If the trial stress does not satisfy (2.38), the increment of fracturing strain in direction i can be
computed using the assumption that the final stress state must satisfy (2.40).
Fi f ii n f ti ii t E iikl kl f f ti 0
(2.40)
This equation can be further simplified under the assumption that the increment of fracturing
strain is normal to the failure surface, and that always only one failure surface is being checked.
For failure surface k , the fracturing strain increment has the following form.
ij f
Fk f
ik
ij
(2.41)
After substitution into (2.40) a formula for the increment of the fracturing multiplier is
recovered.
ATENA Theory
35
kk t f tk
E kkkk
kk t f t( wkmax )
E kkkk
and wkmax Lt ( kk f )
(2.42)
This equation must be solved by iterations since for softening materials the value of current
tensile strength f t( wkmax ) is a function of the crack opening w , and is based on Hordijks formula
(defined in SBETA model).
The crack opening w is computed from the total value of fracturing strain kk f in direction k ,
plus the current increment of fracturing strain , and this sum is multiplied by the
characteristic length Lt . The characteristic length as a crack band size was introduced by
BAZANT and OH. Various methods were proposed for the crack band size calculation in the
framework of finite element method. FEENSTRA (1993) suggested a method based on
integration point volume, which is not well suited for distorted elements. A consistent and rather
complex approach was proposed by OLIVIER. In the presented work the crack band size Lt is
calculated as a size of the element projected into the crack direction, Fig. 2-20. CERVENKA V.
et al. (1995) showed that this approach is satisfactory for low order linear elements, which are
used throughout this study. They also proposed a modification, which accounts for cracks that
are not aligned with element edges.
f t( wkmax ) E kkkk
w
Lt
(2.43)
Equation (2.43) is violated for softening materials only when snap back is observed in the stressstrain relationship, which can occur if large finite elements are used. In the standard
displacement based finite element method, the strain increment is given, therefore, a snap back
on the constitutive level cannot be captured. This means that the critical region, with snap back
on the softening curve, will be skipped in a real calculation, which physically means, that the
energy dissipated by the system will be over estimated. This is of course undesirable, and finite
f (0)
f t(0)
E
should be used, where t
denotes the initial slope
elements smaller then L kkkk
w
w
of the crack softening curve.
36
cr ) 1 E klmn mn
, and Eijlk
cr kl f
cr is defined by ij Eijkl
kl f ( Eijkl Eijkl
(2.44)
cr 0 for i k and j l
Eijkl
(2.45)
f t( wimax )
E
, (no summation of indices)
ii f
(2.46)
(2.47)
where i j , and sF is a shear factor coefficient that defines a relationship between the normal
and shear crack stiffness. The default value of sF is 20.
Shear strength of a cracked concrete is calculated using the Modified Compression Field Theory
of VECHIO and COLLINS (1986).
ij
0.18 f c
, i j
24 w
0.31
ag 16
(2.48)
Where f c is the compressive strength in MPa, a g is the maximum aggregate size in mm and w
is the maximum crack width in mm at the given location. This model is activated by specifying
the maximum aggregate size a g otherwise the default behavior is used where the shear stress on
a crack surface cannot exceed the tensile strength.
The secant constitutive matrix in the material direction was formulated by ROTS and
BLAUWENDRAAD in the matrix format.
E s E - E(E cr E) -1 E
(2.49)
Strain vector transformation matrix T (i.e. global to local strain transformation matrix) can be
used to transform the local secant stiffness matrix to the global coordinate system.
T
E s T Es T
(2.50)
It is necessary to handle the special cases before the onset of cracking, when the crack stiffness
approaches infinity. Large penalty numbers are used for crack stiffness in these cases.
2.2.3.1 Unloading Direction
37
The value of 0 corresponds to unloading to origin (default value for backward compatibility),
fU =1 means unloading direction parallel to the initial elastic stiffness.
(n)
(2.51)
The plastic corrector ijp is computed directly from the yield function by return mapping
algorithm.
(2.52)
The crucial aspect is the definition of the return direction lij , which can be defined as
lij E ijkl
G p ( ijt )
G p ( klt )
then ijp
kl
ij
(2.53)
where G ( ij ) is the plastic potential function, whose derivative is evaluated at the predictor stress
state ijt to determine the return direction.
The failure surface of MENETREY, WILLAM is used in the current version of the material
model.
2
c 0
F 15
. ' m
r
(
,
e
)
'
fc
3 f c'
6 f c
p
3P
(2.54)
where
m3
f c'2 f t '2 e
, r ( , e)
f c' ft ' e 1
1
2
(2.55)
f c( eqp )
c
f
c
38
(2.56)
In the above two formulas the expression f c( eqp ) indicates the hardening/softening law, which is
based on the uniaxial compressive test. The law is shown in Fig. 2-21, where the softening curve
is linear and the elliptical ascending part is given by the following formula:
f co f c f co
c eqp
1
c
(2.57)
f'c
fc0= 2ft
eq
c =f'c/E
p
The law on the ascending branch is based on strains, while the descending branch is based on
displacements to introduce mesh objectivity into the finite element solution, and its shape is
based on the work of VAN MIER. The onset of nonlinear behavior f c'0 is an input parameter as
well as the value of plastic strain at compressive strength cp . The Fig. 2-21 shows typical values
of these parameters. Especially the choice of the parameter f c'0 should be selected with care,
since it is important to ensure that the fracture and plastic surfaces intersect each other in all
material stages. On the descending curve the equivalent plastic strain is transformed into
displacements through the length scale parameter Lc . This parameter is defined by analogy to
the crack band parameter in the fracture model in Sec. 2.2.3, and it corresponds to the projection
of element size into the direction of minimal principal stresses. The square in (2.56) is due to the
quadratic nature of the Mentry-Willam surface.
Return direction is given by the following plastic potential
G p ( ij )
1
3
I1 2 J 2
(2.58)
where determines the return direction. If 0 material is being compacted during crushing,
if 0 material volume is preserved, and if 0 material is dilating. In general the plastic
model is non-associated, since the plastic flow is not perpendicular to the failure surface
The return mapping algorithm for the plastic model is based on predictor-corrector approach as
is shown in Fig. 2-22. During the corrector phase of the algorithm the failure surface moves
along the hydrostatic axis to simulate hardening and softening. The final failure surface has the
apex located at the origin of the Haigh-Vestergaard coordinate system. Secant method based
Algorithm 1 is used to determine the stress on the surface, which satisfies the yield condition and
also the hardening/softening law.
ATENA Theory
39
Fig. 2-23. Schematic description of the iterative process (2.73). For clarity shown in two dimensions.
Algorithm 1: (Input is
ij , ( n 1) ijp , ( n ) ij )
( n 1)
(2.59)
f Ap F p ( ijt , ( n 1) ijp ) , A 0
(2.60)
Elastic predictor:
Evaluate failure criterion:
f Ap 0
mij
G p ( ijt )
Return mapping:
F p ( ijt B E mij ,
f Bp F p ( ijt B E mij ,
(i )
ijp ) 0 B
( n 1)
(2.62)
ijp B mij )
( n 1)
(2.63)
A B e
(2.64)
A f Ap
(2.61)
ij
mij
B A
f Bp f Ap
G p ( ijt E
( i 1)
(2.65)
mij )
(2.66)
ij
f p F p ( ijt E
(i )
mij ,
ijp
( n 1)
(i )
mij )
(2.67)
f Bp 0
f Bp 0
f Bp f p , B
f Ap f Bp , A B ,
f Bp f p , B
(2.68)
(2.69)
(n)
ij ijt B E (i ) mij
(n)
(2.70)
(2.71)
(2.72)
Each inequality depends on the output from the other one, therefore the following iterative
scheme is developed.
Algorithm 2:
Step 1: F p ( ( n 1) ij Eijkl ( kl (i 1) klf b ( i 1) klcor ( i ) klp )) 0 solve for (i ) klp
Step 2: F f ( ( n 1) ij Eijkl ( kl (i ) klp (i ) klf )) 0 solve for (i ) klf
Step 3: (i ) ijcor (i ) ijf ( i ) ijf
(2.73)
Iterative correction of the strain norm between two subsequent iterations can be expressed as
ATENA Theory
41
(i ) ijcor (1 b) f p ( i ) ijcor
where
f
(i ) ijf (i 1) ijf
(i ) ijp (i 1) ijp
,
p
(2.74)
( i ) ijp (i ) ijp
ijcor
(2.75)
f p
, where is related to the requested convergence rate. For linear rate it can be
f p
f p
as b 1
1
1 , then the convergence would be too slow. In this case b can be estimated
b 1
42
(2.76)
where the superscript i denotes values from two subsequent iterations. This will eliminate
problems due to the oscillation of the correction parameter b . Important condition for the
convergence of the above Algorithm 2 is that the failure surfaces of the two models are
intersecting each other in all possible positions even during the hardening or softening.
Additional constraints are used in the iterative algorithm. If the stress state at the end of the first
step violates the Rankine criterion, the order of the first two steps in Algorithm 2 is reversed.
Also in reality concrete crushing in one direction has an effect on the cracking in other
directions. It is assumed that after the plasticity yield criterion is violated, the tensile strength in
all material directions is set to zero.
On the structural level secant matrix is used in order to achieve a robust convergence during the
strain localization process.
The proposed algorithm for the combination of plastic and fracture models is graphically shown
in Fig. 2-23. When both surfaces are activated, the behavior is quite similar to the multi-surface
plasticity (SIMO et al. 1988). Contrary to the multi-surface plasticity algorithm the proposed
method is more general in the sense that it covers all loading regimes including physical changes
such as for instance crack closure. Currently, it is developed only for two interacting models, and
its extension to multiple models is not straightforward.
There are additional interactions between the two models that need to be considered in order to
properly describe the behavior of a concrete material:
(a) After concrete crushing the tensile strength should decrease as well
(b) According to the research work of Collins (VECHIO and COLLINS (1986)) and
coworkers it was established the also compressive strength should decrease when
cracking occurs in the perpendicular direction. This theory is called compression field
theory and it is used to explain the shear failure of concrete beams and walls.
The interaction (a) is resolved by adding the equivalent plastic strain to the maximal fracturing
strain in the fracture model to automatically increase the tensile damage based on the
compressive damage such that the fracturing strains satisfies the following condition:
kk f
ft p
eq
f c
(2.77)
The compressive strength reduction (b) is based on the following formula based proposed by
Collins:
c rc f c
rc
1
, rclim rc 1.0
0.8 170 1
(2.78)
Where 1 is the tensile strain in the crack. In ATENA the largest maximal fracturing strain is
used for 1 and the compressive strength reduction is limited by rclim . If rclim is not specified then
no compression reduction is considered.
43
CC3DNonLinCementitious,
CC3DNonLinCementitious2,
CC3DNonLinCementitious2Variable,
CC3DNonLinCementitious2Fatigue (described in section 2.2.10),
CC3DNonLinCementitious2User,
CC3DNONLINCEMENTITIOUS2SHCC (described in section 2.2.11),
and CC3DNonLinCementitious3 (described in section 2.2.12),
with the following differences: CC3DCementitious assumes linear response up to the point when
the failure envelope is reached both in tension and compression. This means that there is no
hardening regime in Fig. 2-21. The material CC3DNonLinCementitious on the contrary assumes
a hardening regime before the compressive strength is reached. The material
CC3DNonLinCementitious2 is equivalent to CC3DNonLinCementitious but purely incremental
formulation is used (in CC3DNonLinCementitious a total formulation is used for the fracturing
part of the model), therefore this material can be used in creep calculations or when it is
necessary to change material properties during the analysis. The material
CC3DNonLinCementitious2Variable is based on the material CC3DNonLinCementitious2 and it
allows to define history evolution laws for selected material parameters. The following material
parameters can be defined using an arbitrary evolution laws: young modulus E , tensile strength
f t ' , compressive strength f c' and f c'0 . It is the responsibility of the user to define the parameters
in a meaningful way. It means that at any time:
ft '
f c'0 f c'0 ,
f c'0
f c'0 0,
(2.79)
f c' 0
(2.80)
The material CC3DNonLinCementitious2User allows for user defined laws for selected material
laws such as: diagrams for tensile and softening behavior (see Fig. 2-24 and Fig. 2-25), shear
retention factor (Fig. 2-26) and the effect of lateral compression on tensile strength (Fig. 2-27).
t/ft
1.0
t
(f1 ) Lt/Lch
loc
loc
~f1
44
c/fc
1.0
c
(eqc ) Lc/Lch
loc
~ peq
loc
G/Gc
1.0
f
sh
(1 ) Lt/Lch
loc
sh
~f1
loc
Fig. 2-26. An example of a user defined shear retention factor for shear stiffness degradation after
cracking.
In the user defined material mode II and III crack stiffness are evaluated with the help of the
shear retention factor rg as:
cr
Eijij
rg G
1 rg
(2.81)
where i j , rg min(rgi , rgj ) is the minimum of shear retention factors on cracks in directions
i , j , and G is the elastic shear modulus. Shear retention factor on a crack in direction i is
ATENA Theory
45
is entering into the softening regime. For instance, the strain value that is used to determine the
tensile strength is calculated based on the following assumptions:
f
if 1f loc
1f 1f
else
(2.82)
Ltch
The calculation of the strain value for graphs in Fig. 2-25 and Fig. 2-26 is analogical to Eq.
(2.82) but the appropriate values of loc , L and Lch should be used. It should be noted that the
strain 1f is the strain that is calculated from the strain tensor at the finite element integration
points, while the strain 1f is used to determine the current tensile strength from the provided
stress-strain diagram (see Fig. 2-24). The equation (2.82) then represents a scaling that takes into
account the difference between the experimental size and the size of the integration point. This
approach guarantees that the same amount of energy is dissipated when using large and small
finite elements.
It is also possible to define a material law for the shear strength of a cracked concrete and for the
compressive strength reduction after cracking.
Compressive strength of cracked concrete
c rc (1f ) f c
(2.83)
ij f sh (1f ) ft
(2.84)
It should be realized that the compressive strength of the cracked concrete i.e. (2.83) is a
function of the maximal fracturing strain, i.e. maximal tensile damage at the given point. The
shear strength should be a function of the crack opening. Because of that the shear strength is
specified as a function of the fracturing strain 1f after the localization transformation (2.82).
The shear strength law is specified as a value relative to f t . The compressive strength reduction
is specified as a function relative to f c .
46
t/ft
1.0
1.0
3/fc
Fig. 2-27. An example of a user defined tensile strength degradation law due to lateral compressive
stress.
ft
c ts ft
47
overestimated. This is the consequence of the fact that the crack band approach assumes that the
crack spacing is larger than a finite element size. In heavily reinforced structures, or if large
finite elements are used, it may occur that the crack spacing will be smaller than finite element
size. This is especially true if shell/plate elements are used. In this case, typically large finite
elements can be used, and they usually contain significant reinforcement. In these cases, it is
useful to provide the crack spacing manually, since otherwise the program will overestimate the
cracking and due to that also larger deflections may be calculated. The program ATENA allows
the user to manually define the crack spacing. This user defined spacing is used as crack band
size Lt in cases when the user defined crack spacing is smaller than the Lt that would be
calculated by formulas presented in Section 2.1.3.
2.2.10 Fatigue
For modelling fatigue behavior of concrete (CEB 1988 and SAE AE-4) under tensile load, a new
material
has
been
implemented
in
ATENA.
The
new
material
(CC3DNonLinCementitious2Fatigue) is based on the existing three-dimensional fracture plastic
material (CC3DNonLinCementitious2) and uses a stress based model (2.2.10.1). It has an
additional parameter, fatigue , and additional data attributes for base , N , and fatigue , used in the
damage calculation as described in section 2.2.10.2. For details and validation against tests
conducted by KESSLER-KRAMER (2002) see ERVENKA, PRYL (2007) or PRYL,
CERVENKA, PUKL (2010). Modelling 3-point bending tests with this material is presented in
PRYL, PUKL, CERVENKA (2013) and PRYL, D., MIKOLKOV, J., PUKL, R. (2014).
2.2.10.1 Stress Based Models
In this approach the fatigue is represented by the so called S-N curves relating the applied stress,
S, and the number of cycles, N, to failure. Such curves must be determined by tests, see Fig.
2-29.
For steel reinforcement bars the performance can be normally expressed as a simple power law
by BASQUIN (1910).
rm N C
(2.85)
where r is the stress range, N is the number of cycles to failure and m and C are constants.
This means a linear relationship between and N in a full logarithmic diagram. The equation
(2.85) is generally valid for the high-cycle range.
For plain concrete the performance can normally be expressed as a straight line in a semilogarithmic diagram of the form:
max
f
48
1 1 R log N
(2.86)
min
, min is minimum
max
stress and is a material constant. The equation (2.86) holds for both compressive and tensile
stresses, however, the value of is not neccessarily the same for tensile and compressive
behavior of a material. The value should be determined from experiments. For example,
=0.052 was used based on the experimental results for load levels 0.7 and 0.9 Fstat when
modelling the test on a probe sealed during curing with a notch from section 3.5.2.4 of
KESSLER-KRAMER (2002) for validation.
Fig. 2-29: Typical S-N line for concrete in compression (KLAUSEN (1978))
The S-N relations mentioned above are mainly obtained by constant amplitude tests. However,
in real structures the stresses are varying. One method which can be of help in this context is the
well-known Palmgren-Miner hypothesis PALMGREN (1924), MINER (1945).
k
ni
N
i 1
(2.87)
where ni is the number of constant amplitude cycles at stress level i , N i is the number of cycles
to failure at stress level i , and k is the number of stress levels. As a rough tool this hypothesis is
useful, especially concerning steel. It can also be used for concrete although some investigations
have suggested that a value lower than 1 should be used.
ATENA Theory
49
In the implemented model, fatigue damage consists of a contribution based on cyclic stress
(2.2.10.2.1), and an additional contribution from crack opening and closing in each cycle
(2.2.10.2.2). The former is dominant before cracking occurs, the latter in already cracked
regions.
2.2.10.2.1 Stress Based Contribution
The number of cycles to failure N is determined from a simple stress based model, so called SN or Whler curve as described in the previous section 2.2.10.1.
upper
f
upper
fatigue 1 R
base
.
upper
Then, the damage due to fatigue after n cycles is calculated as an increase of the maximum
fracturing strain ij f
w fail
w fatigue
n
w fail and the failing displacement for the given stress
N
ElemSize
invert _ soft _ law( upper ) (see Fig. 2-30).
fatigue
, where w fatigue
50
In ATENA 4.0, a single value of fatigue is used to calculate fatigue damage caused by both
tensile and compressive stresses. So far, there is also no special provision implemented for loads
crossing zero, i.e., changing from tension to compression and back in each cycle, which lead to
faster damage according to experimental results presented in CEB 1988 and SAE AE-4. In that
situation, the damage is calculated separately for cyclic loading from 0 to max. compression and
from 0 to max. tension, and then the worse of the both damage values is considered. It should be
also noted that the damage is only introduced in form of maximum fracturing strain, which has
no direct impact on compressive material properties, i.e., the fatigue damage effectively only has
influence on tensile behaviour of the material.
2.2.10.2.2 Crack Opening Based Contribution
The damage due to cracks that open and close during the cyclic loading is determined as
w
fatigueCOD fatigueCOD , where w fatigueCOD n fatigue c fatigueCODload COD , and COD denotes the
ElemSize
difference between the maximum and minimum crack opening during a cycle. The resulting
fatigueCOD is added to fatigue before the fatigue damage is introduced into the material.
2.2.10.3 Bringing in Fatigue Damage
It is recommended to introduce the fatigue induced damage into the unloaded structure (i.e., at
the lower stress level). Several other approaches of introducing the damage into the model were
also tested, i.e., introducing the damage at the upper load level or during reloading, but they
usually bring more convergence problems, especially during unloading.
ATENA Theory
51
set
rack
ry c
nda
seco
t
ack se
r
c
y
r
prima
Fig. 2-31: Representative volume element with cracks.
A set of parallel planar multiple cracks forms when maximum principal stress max = fc (first
crack strength).
Secondary crack set may form in direction perpendicular to primary set if the maximum
normal stress in the corresponding direction (-axis) exceeds fc.
Crack opening and sliding displacements are averaged over the RVE as cracking strains
mc ,
mc ,
, ij (notation: lower indices components of tensor or vector, upper indices
ij
multiple or localized crack mc, lc and association with primary or secondary crack direction ,
)
A localized crack forms within a set of multiple cracks if the corresponding normal cracking
strain exceeds the level of mcmb (cracking strain capacity, a material constant).
Opening and sliding displacements of the i , i localized cracks are treated by the crack
lc,
lc,
band model (i.e. they are transformed into cracking strains ij , ij by dividing them with
corresponding band width wc or wc).
The overall strain of the RVE is then obtained as a sum of strain of material between cracks
(which may possibly contain nonlinear plastic strain due to compressive yielding), cracking
strains due to multiple cracks, and cracking strains due to localized cracks:
ij
s
ij
mc ,
ij
mc ,
ij
lc,
ij
lc ,
ij
where ijs represents the strain of the continuous material between cracks.
52
(2.88)
The crack-normal stress components are related to cracking strains corresponding to opening of
multiple and localized cracks by piecewise linear relations depicted in Fig. 2-32 [although linear
hardening and softening are shown, a user should be allowed to input piecewise linear curves].
Note that for multiple cracks, it is assumed that they do not close unless exposed to crack-normal
compression (plasticity-like unloading) while a localized crack is assumed to close so that
normal stress decreases linearly to reach zero at zero COD [these assumptions may need to be
revised in the future to some combination of plasticity and damage-like closure]. See also section
2.2.3.
multiple cracking regime
crack
opening
loading
unloading/
reloading
mcmb
cracking strain mc
unloading/
reloading
COD
cracking strain mc
The model for crack sliding phenomena is implemented by means of a variable shear retention
factor The shear retention factor is defined as a ratio of the material post-cracking shear
stiffness Gc to its elastic shear stiffness G,
Gc
.
G
(2.89)
Let us determine stiffness Gc, while considering the most general 2-D case of an element, which
contains two perpendicular sets of multiple cracks and two perpendicular localized cracks. If the
problem is defined in plane , then the total engineering shear strain has only one non-zero
component, which is obtained as:
mc ,
mc ,
lc ,
lc ,
(2.90)
which can be rewritten with use of the shear bridging model (Kabele, 2000) as:
1
G
1
M
mc ,
1
M
mc ,
1
wc L
1
wc L
1
Gc
(2.91)
ATENA Theory
Vf k Gf
2
(2.92)
53
Vf k Gf
1
L()
2 2 0 4 k G f
1
3 E f d f
, for 0
L ( ) 0 , for 0
(2.93)
Here Vf is the fiber volume fraction, Gf is the fiber shear modulus, Ef is the fiber Youngs
modulus, df is the fiber diameter, and k is the fiber cross-section shape correction factor. The
quantity and indicates the crack opening in direction and respectively. The parameter
0 represents the limiting value of the crack opening displacement, when no tensile stress can be
transferred across the crack, i.e. the point when the stress-displacement diagram in Fig. 2-32
drops to zero. These parameters are to be supplied by the user with the exception of the
parameter 0 , which is automatically extracted from the provided stress-strain law for tension.
The shear retention factor is then expressed as
1
1
1
1
1 G
mc ,
mc ,
M ( ) M ( ) wc L( ) wc L( )
(2.94)
0 and
Note that for an element containing only multiple cracks (before localization)
mc ,
mc ,
0 and 1/M and 1/L
1/L terms approach zero. For an uncracked element,
approach zero, giving =1.
The position of failure surface can expand and move along the hydrostatic axis (simulating the
hardening and softening stages), based on the value of the hardening/softening parameter (). In
the present model, this parameter identifies with the volumetric plastic strain (GRASSL et al.,
2002) :
d d pv d1p d 2p d 3p
(2.95)
The instantaneous shape and location of the loading surface during hardening is defined by a
hardening function (k), which depends on the hardening/softening parameter (). This function is
directly incorporated in the Mentrey-Willam failure surface equations (2.54), operating as a
54
scaling factor on the compressive concrete strength (fc). It has the same elliptic form with
CC3DNonLinCementitious2 (2.57), but herein in terms of the plastic volumetric strain :
pv,t pv
k() k( ) k o 1 k o 1
p
v,t
p
v
(2.96)
where pv,t is the plastic volumetric strain at uniaxial concrete strength (onset of softening) and ko
is the value that defines the initial yield surface that bounds the initial elastic regime (onset of
plasticity). At the end of the hardening process, the hardening function retains a constant value
of unity and the material enters the softening regime, which is controlled by the softening
function (c). This function simulates the material decohesion by shifting the loading surface
along the negative hydrostatic axis. It is assumed that it follows the softening function originally
proposed by VAN GYSEL and TAERWE (1996) for uniaxial compression:
p
c() c( v ) n1 1
1
n 2 1
(2.97)
where :
n1 pv / pv,t
(2.98)
n 2 ( pv,t t) / pv,t
(2.99)
Parameter t in equation (2.99) controls the slope of the softening function and the outmost square
is necessary due to the quadratic nature of the loading surface. The softening function value
starts from unity and complete material decohesion is attained at c = 0. The evolution of both
hardening and softening functions with respect to the hardening/softening parameter is
schematically shown in Fig. 2-33.
ATENA Theory
55
k() / c()
1.0
k
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
ko
0.0
v,t
= pv
Fig. 2-33: Evolution of hardening (k) and softening (c) functions with respect to the plastic
volumetric strain.
2.2.12.2 Plastic Potential Function
The present plasticity model incorporates a non-associated flow rule using a polynomial plastic
potential function (g), with Lode angle () dependency and adjustable order (n) :
n
g A
a
C (B C)(1 cos3)
2
k c fc k c fc
k c fc
(2.100)
Parameters A, B and C define the shape of the plastic potential function in stress space and their
calibration is based on the assumption that the inclination () of the incremental plastic strain
vector identifies with the inclination of the total plastic strain vector at three distinct stress states,
namely the uniaxial, equibiaxial and triaxial compressive concrete strength (Fig. 2-34). The
attraction constant (a) is included for mathematical clarity and is not a user parameter, due to
plastic potential function differentiation in the flow rule.
56
Fig. 2-34: Direction () of the incremental (a) and total (b) plastic strain vectors.
2.2.12.3 Suggested Model Parameters
A detailed calibration scheme for the plasticity model parameters, based on and extensive
experimental database can be found in PAPANIKOLAOU and KAPPOS (2007) and suggested
values (including the fracture model parameters) for various uniaxial compressive concrete
strengths (fc) are shown in the following table (see Atena Input File Format document for the
material definition details):
Table 2.2-1 Suggested parameters for the fracture and plasticity models
fc (Pa)
20
30
40
50
60
70
c (MPa)
24377
27530
30011
32089
33893
35497
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
ft (MPa)
1.917
2.446
2.906
3.323
3.707
4.066
1.043
1.227
1.376
1.505
1.619
1.722
0.5281
0.5232
0.5198
0.5172
0.5151
0.5133
fco (MPa)
-4.32
-9.16
-15.62
-23.63
-33.14
-44.11
pv,t
4.9210-4
6.5410-4
8.0010-4
9.3510-4
1.0610-3
1.1810-3
1.3310-3
2.0010-3
2.6710-3
3.3310-3
4.0010-3
4.6710-3
7.342177
5.436344
4.371435
3.971437
3.674375
3.43856
-8.032485
-6.563421
-5.73549
-5.430334
-5.202794
-5.021407
-3.726514
-3.25626
-3.055953
-2.903173
-2.797059
-2.719067
Gf (MN/m)
4.8710-5
6.4710-5
7.9210-5
9.2610-5
1.0510-4
1.1710-4
ATENA Theory
57
fc (Pa)
80
90
100
110
120
c (MPa)
36948
38277
39506
40652
41727
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
ft (MPa)
4.405
4.728
5.036
5.333
5.618
1.816
1.904
1.986
2.063
2.136
0.5117
0.5104
0.5092
0.5081
0.5071
fco (MPa)
-56.50
-70.30
-85.48
-102.01
-114.00
pv,t
1.3010-3
1.4110-3
1.5210-3
1.6210-3
1.7310-3
5.3310-3
6.0010-3
6.6710-3
7.3310-3
8.0010-3
3.245006
3.082129
2.942391
2.820644
2.713227
-4.871993
-4.745867
-4.637358
-4.542587
-4.458782
-2.659098
-2.611426
-2.572571
-2.540158
-2.512681
Gf (MN/m)
1.2910-4
1.4010-4
1.5010-4
1.6110-4
1.7110-4
where
k
p
eq
J2
(2.101)
y eqp is the maximal shear stress and y is the uniaxial yield stress. This
y eqp y H eqp ,
N inc
eqp
i 1
: p
(2.102)
y is the yield stress, H the hardening modulus and eqp is the equivalent plastic strain
calculated as a summation of equivalent plastic strains during the loading history.
In case of von Mises plasticity the plastic potential function is identical with the yield function:
G p ( ij ) F P ( ij )
(2.103)
The associated flow rule is assumed. The background information can be found in (CHEN,
SALEEB 1982, Sec.5.4.2).
The Von Mises model could be used to model cyclic steel behavior including Bauschinger
effect. In this case the yield function is modified as:
58
X : X k eqp (r 1)k0 0
(2.104)
where is the deviatoric stress, k0 is an initial value of k ( eqp ) according to (2.102), X is the so
called back stress controlling the kinematic hardening:
X 2 3 k1 p k2 X eqp
(2.105)
In equations (2.104) and (2.105) quantities r , k1 , k2 are material parameters for the cyclic
response. If r is non-zero the cyclic model is activated and it controls the radius of the Von
Mises surface. If r 1 the yielding will start exactly when y is reached. For lower values the
non-linear behavior starts earlier and the slope of the response is mainly affected by parameter
k1 (larger value higher slope). Parameter k2 on the other hand affects the memory of the cyclic
response. Some examples of various parameter combinations are shown at Fig. 2-35.
ATENA Theory
59
Fig. 2-35: Effect of material parameter choice on cyclic response for E=210 GPa and y = 200 MPa.
60
(2.106)
Where and k are parameters defining the shape of the failure surface. They can be estimated
by matching with the Mohr-Coulomb surface. If the two surface are to agree along the
compressive meridian, i.e. 00 , the formulas are:
2sin
,
3 3 sin
6 c cos
3 3 sin
(2.107)
This corresponds to a outer cone to the Mohr-Coulomb surface. The inner cone, which passes
through the tensile meridian where 600 has the constants given by the following expressions:
2sin
,
3 3 sin
6 c cos
3 3 sin
(2.108)
The position of failure surfaces is not fixed but it can move depending on the value of strain
hardening/softening parameter. The strain hardening is based on the equivalent plastic strain,
which is calculated according to the following formula.
(2.109)
k k0
f c( eqp )
f c
(2.110)
In the above two formulas the expression f c( eqp ) indicates the hardening/softening law, which is
based on the uniaxial compressive test. The law is shown in Fig. 2-36.
ATENA Theory
1
3
I1 2 J 2
(2.111)
61
where determines the return direction. If 0 material is being compacted during crushing,
if 0 material volume is preserved, and if 0 material is dilating. In general the plastic
model is non-associated, since the plastic flow is not perpendicular to the failure surface
The return mapping algorithm for the plastic model is based on predictor-corrector approach as
is shown in Fig. 2-22. During the corrector phase of the algorithm the failure surface moves
along the hydrostatic axis to simulate hardening and softening. The final failure surface has the
apex located at the origin of the Haigh-Vestergaard coordinate system. Secant method based
Algorithm 1 is used to determine the stress on the surface, which satisfies the yield condition and
also the hardening/softening law.
1 Ktt
2 0
0
0
Ktt
0
0 v1
0 v2
K nn u
(2.112)
c , 0
c ,
0 1
0
2
ft c
2
0 , ft
62
(2.113)
c
c2
1
2
ft c
, c
ft 2
, 0 ft
c 2 ft
In tension the failure criterion is replaced by an ellipsoid, which intersect the normal stress axis
at the value of ft with the vertical tangent and the shear axis is intersected at the value of c (i.e.
cohesion) with the tangent equivalent to .
The parameters for the interface model cannot be defined arbitrarily; there is certain dependence
of the some parameters on the others. When defining the interface parameters, the following
rules should be observed:
ft
c 0,
, ft c
(2.114)
f t 0, 0
It is recommended that parameters c, f t , are always greater than zero. In cases when no
cohesion or no tensile strength is required, some very small values should be prescribed.
Trial stress
Initial surface
Final stress
Residual surface
ft
In general three-dimensional case in Fig. 2-37 and equation (2.113) is calculated as:
12 22
ATENA Theory
(2.115)
63
min
Ktt
Ktt
1
(a)
ft
min
Knn
Knn
(b)
Fig. 2-38: Typical interface model behavior in shear (a) and tension (b)
The K nn , K tt denote the initial elastic normal and shear stiffness respectively. Typically for zero
thickness interfaces, the value of these stiffnesses correspond to a high penalty number. It is
recommended not to use extremely high values as this may result in numerical instabilities. It is
recommended to estimate the stiffness value using the following formulas
K nn
E
,
t
K tt
G
t
(2.116)
where E and G is minimal elastic modulus and shear modulus respectively of the surrounding
material. t is the width of the interface zone. Its value can be selected either on the basis of the
reality. For instance for mortar between masonry bricks the value is typically 10-20 mm.
Alternatively, it can be estimated as a dimension, which can be considered negligible with
respect to the structural size. For instance in case of a dam analysis, where the dam dimensions
are typically in the order of 100 meters, the width of the interface zone can be estimated to be 0.5
64
meters. It is suitable due to numerical reasons if stiffness is about 10 times of the stiffness of
adjacent finite elements.
There are two additional stiffness values that need to be specified in the ATENA input. They are
denoted in Fig. 2-38 as K nnmin and K ttmin . They are used only for numerical purposes after the
failure of the element in order to preserve the positive definiteness of the global system of
equations. Theoretically, after the interface failure the interface stiffness should be zero, which
would mean that the global stiffness will become indefinite. These minimal stiffnesses should be
about 0.001 times of the initial ones.
It is possible to define evolution laws for tensile as well as shear softening by arbitrary
multilinear laws. Examples of such laws are shown in Fig. 2-39. The figure describes bi-linear
softening laws. The break point of this law can be determined for instance by the formula
proposed by Bruehwiler and Wittman (1990).
s1
ft
,
4
v1 0.75
GF
ft
(2.117)
cc 0
ft
I
GF
s1
u1
II
GF
s1c
u
u eqf
v 1c
u eqf
The evolution law depends on the equivalent nonlinear interface relative displacement
ueqf u 2f v 2f 1 v 2f 2 in 3D and ueqf u 2f v 2f in 2D
(2.118)
Where u f and v fi are the inelastic components of the relative interface displacement on the
basis of their decomposition into elastic and nonlinear, i.e. fracturing part.
u ue u f
vi vi v fi
(2.119)
This approach ensures that the degradation in shear affects also tensile strength and vice versa.
For instance, when the interface is damaged in shear, the tensile strength is reduced as well. The
typical behavior of the interface model with the softening evolution laws is shown in Fig. 2-38
by the dotted lines. The default behavior when no softening law is given is brittle with
immediate drop to zero in tension and to the residual dry friction in shear. The behavior is shown
in Fig. 2-38 by the solid black line.
When user softening laws are defined for the interface material, it is recommended that the
softening law for cohesion is always more ductile then the one for tensile strength, i.e. the
cohesion should be higher than the tensile strength at any time during the softening process.
ATENA Theory
65
Fig. 2-40: Example of a cyclic response of the model in shear under constant normal pre-stress.
66
The initial elastic part has the elastic modulus of steel Es. The second line represents the
plasticity of the steel with hardening and its slope is the hardening modulus Esh. In case of
perfect plasticity Esh =0. Limit strain L represents limited ductility of steel.
The above described stress-strain laws can be used for the discrete as well as the smeared
reinforcement. The smeared reinforcement requires two additional parameters: the reinforcing
ratio p (see Section 2.1.1.1) and the direction angle as shown in Fig. 2-43.
ATENA Theory
67
The spacing s of the smeared reinforcement is assumed infinitely small. The stress in the
smeared reinforcement is evaluated in the cracks, therefore it should include also a part of stress
due to tension stiffening (which is acting in concrete between the cracks, section 2.1.9).
(2.120)
where s is the steel stress between the cracks (the steel stress in smeared reinforcement), scr
'
'
is the steel stress in a crack. If no tension stiffening is specified ts =0 and scr s . In case of
'
'
0 r * r
(2.121)
where
b
*
68
1 b *
1
*R
r
,
0 r
R R0
c1
c2
(2.122)
where R0 , c1 and c2 are experimentally determined parameters. The Fig. 2-44 shows the
meaning of strain values r , 0 , and stress values r and 0 . These values changes for each
cycle. The values with the subscript r indicate the point where the cycle started, and the
subscript 0 indicates the theorethical yield point that would be reached during the unloading if
the response would not have been modified by the hysteretic behavior. During the calculation of
this point the material stress-strain law is considered (see Sections 2.7.2, 2.7.3)
* f R eq , eq
Nincr .
i 1
i
eq
(2.123)
Fig. 2-44: Cyclic reinforcement model based on Menegotto and Pinto (1973).
ATENA Theory
69
max s
1
max
max
max f
s1 s s 2
ss
,
s s
2
70
0 s s1
(2.124)
(2.125)
s 2 s s3
(2.126)
s3 s
(2.127)
Table 2.8-1: Parameters for defining the mean bond strength-slip relationship for ribbed bars.
2
Value
Unconfined concrete*
Confined concrete**
Bond conditions
Bond conditions
Good
S1
0.6 mm
0.6 mm
1.0 mm
S2
0.6 mm
0.6 mm
3.0 mm
S3
1.0 mm
2.5 mm
Good
0.4
0.4
max
2.0
1.0
f
C
2.5
1.25
0.15 max
0.40 max
Values
Bond conditions
Bond conditions
Good
All other
Good
cases
s1 s 2 s3
max f
0.1
f
C
0.01 mm
0.1 mm
0.5
0.5
0.05
f
C
0.3
f
C
0.15
f
C
ATENA Theory
71
The ascending part of the stress-slip law i.e. part a is modeled by a bi-linear curve. The
coordinates of the four points defining this stress-slip relationship are listed in the table below.
Table 2.8-3: Parameters for defining the bond strength-slip relationship for smooth bars.
Concrete Bond
Type
quality
Excelent
f c' < 60
Good
Bad
Excelent
f c' > 60
Good
Bad
72
Point 1
Point 2
Point 3
Point 4
s/D
0.000
0.020
0.044
0.480
b / 0.8 f cu'
0.500
3.000
0.700
0.000
s/D
0.000
0.030
0.047
0.480
b / 0.8 f cu'
0.500
2.000
0.700
0.000
s/D
0.000
0.040
0.047
0.480
b / 0.8 f cu'
0.500
1.000
0.700
0.000
s/D
0.000
0.012
0.030
0.340
b / 0.88 f cu'
0.600
2.500
0.900
0.000
s/D
0.000
0.020
0.030
0.340
b / 0.88 f cu'
0.600
1.900
0.900
0.000
s/D
0.000
0.025
0.030
0.340
b / 0.88 f cu'
0.600
1.100
0.900
0.000
max the maximum bond stress (max. value from the bond strength bond slip function).
In the figure, s is the current slip value, smax the maximum of the absolute slip value ever reached
(damage variable), f ( s ) is the bond strength function.
s smax
f (s)
(2) Unloading range
s 0 1
s 0 1
73
order to model strain softening, extended or modified Taylors model in several ways (in detail
see BAZANT et al. 2000), among which the main one was the kinematic constraint between the
strain tensor and the microplane strain vectors. Since 1984, there have been numerous
improvements and variations of the microplane approach. A detailed overview of the history of
the microplane model is included in BAZANT et al 2000 and CANER and BAZANT 2000. In
what follows, we briefly review the derivation of the microplane model that is used in this work.
In the microplane model, the constitutive equations are formulated on a plane, called
microplane, having an arbitrary orientation characterized by its unit normal ni . The kinematic
constraint means that the normal strain N and shear strains M , L on the microplane are
calculated as the projections of the macroscopic strain tensor ij :
N ni n j ij , M
1
1
mi n j m j ni ij , L li n j l j ni ij
2
2
(2.128)
where mi and li are chosen orthogonal vectors lying in the microplane and defining the shear
strain components. The constitutive relations for the microplane strains and stresses can be
generally stated as:
N (t ) Ft0 N ( ), L ( ), M ( )
M (t ) Gt 0 N ( ), L ( ), M ( )
(2.129)
L (t ) Gt 0 N ( ), L ( ), M ( )
where F and G are functionals of the history of the microplane strains in time t. For a detailed
derivation of these functionals a reader is referred to BAZANT et al 2000 and CANER and
BAZANT 2000. The macroscopic stress tensor is obtained by the principle of virtual work that is
applied to a unit hemisphere . After the integration, the following expression for the
macroscopic stress tensor is recovered (BAZANT 1984):
Nm
3
ij
sij d 6 w sij( ) , where sij N ni n j M mi n j m j ni L li n j l j ni
2
2
2
1
(2.130)
where the integral is approximated by an optimal Gaussian integration formula for a spherical
surface; numbers label the points of the integration formula and w are the corresponding
optimal weights.
74
Inside each finite element at each integration point, an equivalent localization element is
assumed. The localization element is a serial arrangement of the localization zone, which is
loading, and an elastic zone (spring), which is unloading. The total length of the element is
equivalent to the crack band size L (width), and can be determined using the same methods as
described in Section 2.1.3 (see Fig. 2-12). The width of the localization zone is given either by
the characteristic length of the material or by the size of the test specimen for which the adopted
material model has been calibrated.
The three-dimensional equivalent element is constructed by three serial arrangements of the
elastic zone (spring) and localization band. The spring-band systems are perpendicular to each
other, and they are arranged parallel to the principal strain directions (Fig. 2-48). The simplified
two-dimensional version is shown in Fig. 2-49. In this arrangement of spring-band systems it is
possible to identify the following unknown stresses and strains:
ij ,ij
x u with
ij ,ij
b
u
3
ij ,ij
L
u
ij ,ij
ATENA Theory
75
Localization
element
Finite element
Elastic
springs
ij
2
1
Localization
band
iju
ijb
h
2
Ideally, the chosen directions should be perpendicular to the planes of failure propagation. In
ATENA, it is assumed for them to be aligned with the principal axes of the total macroscopic
strain tensor, which in most cases should approximately correspond to the above requirement.
Altogether there are 48 unknown variables. In the subsequent derivations, it is assumed that
these stresses and strains are defined in the principal frame of the total macroscopic strain tensor.
The set of equations available for determining these variables starts with the constitutive
formulae for the band and the elastic springs:
ijb F ( ijb )
(2.131)
(2.132)
The first formula (2.131) represents the evaluation of the non-linear material model, which in our
case is the microplane model for concrete. The second equation (2.132) is a set of three elastic
constitutive formulations for the three linear zones (springs) that are involved in the arrangement
at Fig. 2-48. This provides the first 24 equations, which can be used for the calculation of
unknown strains and stresses.
The second set of equations is provided by the kinematic constrains on the strain tensors.
76
1 b1 1 u 1
11 h 11 L 1h
L
1
22 2 22b 2h 2 22u 2 L 2h
L
11
1 b 3
33 h 3 33u 3 L 3h
L
1 1
1
12 1 12b 1h 112u 1L 1h 2 12b 2h 212u
2 L
L
33
(2.133)
L 2h
1 1
1
1 1
1
(2.134)
The next set of equations is obtained by enforcing equilibrium in each direction between the
corresponding stress components in the elastic zone and in the localization band. For each
direction m , the following condition must be satisfied:
ijb m e j m iju m e j
for m 1...3
(2.135)
where m e j denotes coordinates of a unit direction vector for principal strain direction m . Since
the principal frame of the total macroscopic strain tensor is used the unit vectors have the
following coordinates:
e j 1, 0, 0 , 2 e j 0,1, 0 , 3e j 0, 0,1
(2.136)
The remaining equations are obtained by enforcing equilibrium between tractions on the other
surfaces of the band and the elastic zone (layer) imagined as a spring:
ijb m e j n iju m e j
(2.137)
The equation (2.137) is equivalent to a static constraint on the remaining stress and strain
components of the elastic springs. Formulas (2.135) and (2.137) together with the assumption of
stress tensor symmetry represent the remaining 18 equations that are needed for the solution of
the three-dimensional equivalent localization element. These 18 equations can be written as:
ijb m iju
for m 1...3
(2.138)
This means that the macroscopic stress must be equal to ijb , i.e., the stress in the localization
element, and that the stresses in all the three elastic zones must be equal to each other and to the
microplane stress ijb . This implies also the equivalence of all the three elastic strain tensors.
Based on the foregoing derivations, it is possible to formulate an algorithm for the calculation of
unknown quantities in the three-dimensional equivalent localization element.
Input:
Initialization:
ATENA Theory
ij , ij , ijb , iju
(2.139)
ijb iju ij
(2.140)
77
d iju
Step 1:
iju
Step 2:
Step 3:
(i )
ijb
(i )
(i )
L jh j L ih
Cijkl rkl(i 1)
i
j
2L L
iju
( i 1)
d iju
(2.141)
(i )
(2.142)
2iL jL
2 i L j L i L jh j L ih u
ij
ij
i
i
L jh j L ih
L j h j L ih
(i )
Step 4:
(i )
(2.143)
(2.144)
where Cijlk is the compliance tensor. The above iterative process is controlled by the following
convergence criteria;
d iju (i )
ij
e ,
rij( i )
ijb
e ,
rij( i ) T d iju ( i )
ijb ij
(2.145)
The macroscopic stress is then equal to the stress in the localization band ijb . More details about
the derivations of the above algorithm as well as various examples of application can be obtained
from the original reference CERVENKA et al. 2004. It should be noted that the described
equivalent localization element is used only if the calculated crack band size L (see Section
2.1.3) in each principal strain direction is larger than the prescribed localization band size h . For
smaller element sizes the equivalent localization approach is not used and mesh-dependent
results may be obtained.
2.10 References
BASQUIN, H.O. (1910), The exponential law of endurance tests, Proc. ASTM, 10 (II).
BAZANT, Z.P, OH, B.H (1983) - Crack Band Theory for Fracture of Concrete, Materials and
Structures, RILEM, Vol. 16, 155-177.
BAANT, Z.P., (1984), Microplane model for strain controlled inelastic behavior, Chapter 3 in
Mechanics of Engineering Materials (Proc., Conf. held at U. of Arizona, Tucson, Jan. 1984),
C.S. Desai and R.H. Gallagher, eds., J. Willey, London, 45-59.
BAANT, Z.P., CANER, F.C., CAROL, I., ADLEY, M.D., AND AKERS, S.A., (2000),
Microplane Model M4 for Concrete: I. Formulation with Work-Conjugate Deviatoric Stress, J.
of Engrg. Mechanics ASCE, 126 (9), 944-961.
BIGAL, A.J (1999) - Structural Dependence of Rotation Capacity of Plastic Hinges in RC
Beams and Slabs, PhD Thesis, Delft University of Technogy, ISBN 90-407-1926-8.
BRUEHWILER, E., and WITTMAN, F.H. (1990), The Wedge Splitting Test, A New Method
of Performing Stable Fracture-Mechanics Tests, Engineering Fracture Mechanics, Vol. 35, No.
1-3, pp. 117-125.
CANER, F.C., AND BAANT, Z.P., (2000) Microplane Model M4 for Concrete: II. algorithm
and calibration.", J. of Engrg. Mechanics ASCE, 129 (9), 954-961.
CEB-FIP Model Code 1990, First Draft, Comittee Euro-International du Beton, Bulletin
d'information No. 195,196, Mars.
CEB 1988, Bulletin DInformation No 188, Fatigue of concrete structures, State of the art report.
78
CERVENKA, V., GERSTLE, K. (1972) - Inelastic Analysis of Reinforced Concrete Panels: (1)
Theory, (2) Experimental Verification and application, Publications IABSE, Zrich, V.31-00,
1971, pp.32-45, and V.32-II,1972, pp.26-39.
CERVENKA, V. (1985) - Constitutive Model for Cracked Reinforced Concrete, Journal ACI,
Proc. V.82, Nov-Dec., No.6,pp.877-882.
CERVENKA, V., PUKL, R., ELIGEHAUSEN, R. (1991) - Fracture Analysis of Concrete Plane
Stress Pull-out Tests, Proceedings, Fracture process in Brittle Disordered Materials, Noordwijk,
Holland, June 19-21.
CERVENKA, V., PUKL, R., OZBOLT, J., ELIGEHAUSEN, R. (1995), Mesh Sensitivity
Effects in Smeared Finite Element Analysis of Concrete Structures, Proc. FRAMCOS 2, 1995,
pp 1387-1396.
CERVENKA, V., PUKL, R. (1992) - Computer Models of Concrete Structures, Structural
Engineering International, Vol.2, No.2, May 1992. IABSE Zrich, Switzerland, ISSN 10168664, pp.103-107.
CERVENKA, V., PUKL, R., OZBOLT, J., ELIGEHAUSEN, R. (1995) - Mesh Sensitivity
Effects in Smeared Finite Element Analysis of Concrete Fracture, Proceedings of FRAMCOS2,
Zurich, Aedificatio.
CERVENKA, V., CERVENKA, J. (1996) - Computer Simulation as a Design Tool for Concrete
Structures, ICCE-96, proceedings of The second International Conference in Civil Engineering
on Computer Applications Research and Practice, 6-8 April, Bahrain.
CERVENKA, J, CERVENKA, V., ELIGEHAUSEN, R. (1998), Fracture-Plastic Material Model
for Concrete, Application to Analysis of Powder Actuated Anchors, Proc. FRAMCOS 3, 1998,
pp 1107-1116.
ERVENKA, J., BAANT Z.P., WIERER, M., (2004), `Equivalent Localization Element for
Crack Band Approach to Mesh Sensitivity in Microplane Model, submitted for publication, Int.
J. for Num. Methods in Engineering.
ERVENKA, J., PRYL, D., (2007), `Fatigue Modelling of Crack Growth by Finite Element
Method and Smeared Crack Approach, Internal Report 2007-08-03-2002-DP, Cervenka
Consulting.
CRISFIELD, M.A., WILLS, J. (1989)- The Analysis of Reinforced Concrete Panels Using
Different Concrete Models, Jour. of Engng. Mech., ASCE, Vol 115, No 3, March, pp.578-597.
CRISFIELD, M.A. (1983) - An Arc-Length Method Including Line Search and Accelerations,
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering, Vol.19,pp.1269-1289.
CHEN, W.F, SALEEB, A.F. (1982) - Constitutive Equations For Engineering Materials, John
Willey \& Sons, ISBN 0-471-09149-9.
DARWIN, D., PECKNOLD, D.A.W. (1974) - Inelastic Model for Cyclic Biaxial Loading of
Reinforced Concrete, Civil Engineering Studies, University of Illinois, July.
DE BORST, R. (1986), Non-linear analysis of frictional materials, Ph.D. Thesis, Delft
University of Technology, 1986.
DRUCKER, D.C., PRAGER, W., Soil Mechanics and Plastic Analysis or Limit Design, Q.
Appl. Math., 1952, 10(2), pp 157-165.
DYNGELAND, T. (1989) - Behavior of Reinforced Concrete Panels, Dissertation, Trondheim
University, Norway, BK-report 1989:1
ATENA Theory
79
FEENSTRA, P.H., Computational Aspects of Bi-axial Stress in Plain and Reinforced Concrete.
Ph.D. Thesis, Delft University of Technology, 1993.
FEENSTRA, P.H., ROTS, J.G., AMESEN, A., TEIGEN, J.G., HOISETH, K.V., A 3D
Constitutive Model for Concrete Based on Co-rotational concept. Proc. EURO-C 1998, 1, pp.
13-22.
ETSE, G., Theoretische und numerische Untersuchung zum diffusen und lokalisierten Versagen
in Beton, Ph.D. Thesis, University of Karlsruhe 1992.
FELIPPA, C. (1966) - Refined Finite Element Analysis of Linear and Nonlinear TwoDimensional Structures, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Engineering, pp.41-50.
GRASSL, P., LUNDGREN, K., and GYLLTOFT, K. (2002) Concrete in compression : A
plasticity theory with a novel hardening law, International Journal of Solids and Structures,
39(20), 5205-5223.
VAN GYSEL, A., and TAERWE, L. (1996) Analytical formulation of the complete stressstrain curve for high strength concrete, Materials and Structures, RILEM, 29(193), 529-533.
HARTL, G. (1977) Die Arbeitlinie Eingebetete Staehle bei erst und kurz=Belastung,
Dissrtation, Univbersitaet Innsbruck
HORDIJK, D.A. (1991) - Local Approach to Fatigue of Concrete, Doctor dissertation, Delft
University of Technology, The Netherlands, ISBN 90/9004519-8.
KABELE, P. (2002) - Equivalent Continuum Model of Multiple Cracking, Engineering
Mechanics 2002, 9 (1/2), pp.75-90, Assoc.for Engineering Mechanics, Czech Republic
KESSLER-KRAMER, CH., (2002) Zugverhalten von Beton unter Ermdungsbeanspruchung,
Schriftenreihe des Instituts fr Massivbau und Baustofftechnologie, Heft 49, Karlsruhe.
KLAUSEN, D. (1978), Festigkeit und Schadigung von Beton bei haufig wiederholter
Beanschpruchung, PhD Thesis, University of Technology Darmstadt, 85 pp.
KOLLEGGER, J. - MEHLHORN, G. (1988) - Experimentelle und Analytische Untersuchungen
zur Aufstellung eines Materialmodels fr Gerissene Stahbetonscheiben, Nr.6 Forschungsbericht,
Massivbau, Gesamthochschule Kassel.
KOLMAR, W. (1986) - Beschreibung der Kraftuebertragung ber Risse in nichtlinearen FiniteElement-Berechnungen von Stahlbetontragwerken", Dissertation, T.H. Darmstadt, p. 94.
KUPFER, H., HILSDORF, H.K., RSCH, H. (1969) - Behavior of Concrete under Biaxial
Stress, Journal ACI, Proc. V.66,No.8, Aug., pp.656-666.
MARGOLDOVA, J., CERVENKA V., PUKL R. (1998), Applied Brittle Analysis, Concrete
Eng. International, November/December 1998.
MENETREY, P., WILLAM, K.J. (1995), Triaxial failure criterion for concrete and its
generalization. ACI, Structural Journal, 1995, 92(3), pp 311-318.
MENETREY, Ph., WALTHER, R., ZIMMERMAN, Th., WILLAM, K.J., REGAN, P.E.
Simulation of punching failure in reinforced concrete structures. Journal of Structural
Engineering, 1997, 123(5), pp 652-659.
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MINER M.A. (1945), Cumulative damage in fatigue. Transactions of the American Society of
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80
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Meth. Eng., 1989, 28, pp 461-474.
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Pre-stressed concrete structures including thermal loading, Comp. Meth. Appl. Mech. Eng., 1983,
41, pp 323-366.
PALMGREN, A. (1924), Die Lebensdauer von Kugellagern. Zeitschrift Verein Deutscher
Ingenieure, 68(14):339-341.
PAPANIKOLAOU, V.K., and KAPPOS, A.J. (2007) Confinement-sensitive plasticity
constitutive model for concrete in triaxial compression, International Journal of Solids and
Structures, 44(21), 7021-7048.
PRAMONO, E, WILLAM, K.J., Fracture Energy-Based Plasticity Formulation of Plain
Concrete, ASCE-JEM, 1989, 115, pp 1183-1204.
PRYL, D., CERVENKA, J., and PUKL, R. (2010) Material model for finite element modelling
of fatigue crack growth in concrete, Procedia Engineering, 2 (2010) 203212.
PRYL, D., PUKL, R., and CERVENKA, J. (2013) Modelling high-cycle fatigue of concrete
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Nuclear Engineering and Design,1968, 7, pp 334-344.
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multi-directional or rotating? HERON 1989, 34(1).
SAE, AE-4, Fatigue Design Handbook
SIMO, J.C., JU, J.W., Strain and Stress-based Continuum Damage Models-I. Formulations, IIComputational Aspects, Int. J. Solids Structures, 1987, 23(7), pp 821-869.
SIMO, J.C., KENNEDY, J.G., GOVINDJEE, S., (1988), Non-smooth Multi-surface Plasticity
and Visco-plasticity. Loading/unloading Conditions and Numerical Algorithms, Int. J. Num.
Meth. Eng., 26, pp 21612185.
TAYLOR, G.I., (1938), Plastic strain in metal, J. Inst. Metals, 62, 307-324.
VAN MIER J.G.M. (1986), Multi-axial Strain-softening of Concrete, Part I: fracture, Materials
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Concrete Beams Subjected to Shear, ACI Journal, Proc. V.83, No.2, Mar-Apr., pp 219-231.
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Academic Press, New York, 1964.
ATENA Theory
81
3 FINITE ELEMENTS
3.1 Introduction
The preceding chapters dealt with the general formulation of the problem, geometric and
constitutive equations. All expressions were derived independently of the structural shape, the
finite elements used etc. Here, an information about finite elements currently implemented in
ATENA is given.
t
h2
3
7
h1
2
t
3
7
h8
8
r
h6
t
h9
3
7
6
2
8
r
The available elements can be divided into three groups: plane elements for 2D, 3D and axisymmetric analysis, solid 3D elements and special elements, which comprises elements for
modeling external cable, springs, gaps etc.
With few exceptions all elements implemented in ATENA are constructed using isoparametric
formulation with linear and/or quadratic interpolation functions. The isoparametric formulation
of one, two and three dimensional elements belongs to the "classic" element formulations. This
ATENA Theory
83
is not because of its superior properties, but due to the fact that it is a versatile and general
approach with no hidden difficulties and, also very important, these elements are easy to
understand. This is very important particularly in nonlinear analysis. For example it is highly
undesirable to add element-related problems to problems related to e.g. material modeling.
Big advantage of ATENA isoparametric elements is that their interpolation functions hi ( r, s, t )
are constructed in hierarchical manner. Take an example of plane quadrilateral element. Some of
its interpolation functions are depicted in Fig. 3-1. The 1st four functions, i.e. functions h1 ( r, s, t )
to h4 ( r, s, t ) has to be always present in the interpolation set, (to ensure bilinear approximation).
Then, any additional function h6 ( r, s, t ) through h9 ( r, s, t ) can be added independently. This
would involve adding the new function itself and also amendments to the already present
interpolation functions. This approach (and use of C++ templates) makes possible that one
element formulation generates quadrilateral elements with nodes (1,2,3,4), (1,2,3,4,5),
(1,2,3,4,6), ... (1,2,3,4,8), (1,2,3,4,9), (1,2,3,4,5,6), (1,2,3,4,5, 7), ... (1,2,3,8,9), ...
(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9). Additional mid-side points are particularly useful for changing mesh density,
(i.e. element size), see Fig. 3-2, as they allow change of mesh density without need triangular
elements.
Although the concept of hierarchical elements was described for plane quadrilateral elements, in
ATENA it applies for plane triangular elements, 3D bricks, tetrahedral and wedge elements, too.
Always there is a set of basic interpolation function that can be extended by any higher
interpolation function.
Apart of interpolation functions finite element properties depend strongly on numerical
integration scheme used to integrate element stiffness matrix, element nodal forces etc. In Atena,
majority of elements are integrated by Gauss integration scheme that ensure n ( n 1) order
accuracy, where n is degree of the polynomial used to approximate the integrated function.
9
6
3
1
10
11
8
5
4
2
Solution with
hierarchical
elements
10
11
7
6
Standard
solution
84
r
CCIsoTruss<xx>
CCIsoTruxx<xxx>
x
Node
i
Function
1
(1 r )
2
1
h3
2
1
(1 r )
2
1
h3
2
(1 r 2 )
hi
Table 3.2-2 Sample points for Gauss integration of 1 node CCIsoTruss<xx> element.
ATENA Theory
Integration point
Coordinate r
Weight
0.
2.
85
Table 3.2-3 Sample points for Gauss integration of 2 and 3 nodes CCIsotruss<xxx> elements.
Integrati
on point
Coordinate r
Weight
0.577350269189626
1.
-0.577350269189626
1.
The element vectors and matrices for Total Lagrangian formulation , configuration at time t
and iteration (i) are as follows. Note that they are equally applicable for Updated Lagrangian
formulation upon applying changes related to the element reference coordinate system
(undeformed vs. deformed element axis.). The formulation is present for 3-nodes element option.
The 2-nodes variant is obtained by simply neglecting the terms for the element mid-point.
An arbitrary point on the truss element has at reference time t coordinates t X [t x1 , t x1 , t x1 ] :
t
X ( i 1) :
t t
t t
t t
t t
(3.2)
X (i )
t t
t t
t t
86
t t
(3.1)
t t ( i ) t t
t 11
(3.3)
(i )
with
(i )
t 11
t t ( i ) 2 t t ( i 1) 2
l l
r
r
2
2
tl
(3.4)
t l t x1 t x2 t x3
r r r r
2
r
r
r
r
r r r r
(3.5)
Substituting (3.5), (3.3) into (3.4) after some math manipulation it can be derived:
h1 h1 t 1 h1 h2
r r x1 r r
h2 h1 t x1 h2 h2
r r 1 r r
h h
h h
3 1 t x11 3 2
r r
r r
h1 h1 t 1 h1 h2
x2
r r
r r
1 h2 h1 t 1 h2 h2
t t
x2
t BL 0
2
r r
t l r r
r h3 h1 t 1 h3 h2
x
r r 2 r r
h h
h h
1 1 t x31 1 2
r r
r r
h2 h1 t 1 h2 h2
x3
r r
r r
h3 h1 t 1 h3 h2
r r x3 r r
ATENA Theory
h1 h3 t 3
x1
r r
h2 h3 t 3
t 2
x1
x1
r r
h h
t 2
x1 3 3 t x13
r r
h h
t 2
x2 1 3 t x23
r r
h
h
t 2
x2 2 3 t x23
r r
h3 h3 t 3
t 2
x2
x2
r r
h h
t 2
x3 1 3 t x33
r r
h
h
t 2
x3 2 3 t x33
r r
h
h
t 2
x3 3 3 t x33
r r
x12
(3.6)
87
t t
t
BL( i11)
h1 h1 t t 1( i 1) h1 h2
u1
r r
r r
2 1 t t u1( i 1) h2 h2
1
r r
r r
h h
h h
3 1 t t u11( i 1) 3 2
r r
r r
h1 h1 t t 1( i 1) h1 h2
u2
r
r r
1 h2 h1 t t 1( i 1) h2 h2
u2
2
r r
t l r r
r h3 h1 t t 1( i 1) h3 h2
u2
r r
r r
h h
h h
1 1 t t u31( i 1) 1 2
r r
r r
h2 h1 t t 1( i 1) h2 h2
u3
r r
r r
h3 h1 t t 1( i 1) h3 h2
u3
r r
r r
h1 h3 t t 3( i 1)
u1
r r
h2 h3 t t 3( i 1)
t t 2( i 1)
u1
u1
r r
h h
t t 2( i 1)
u1
3 3 t t u13( i 1)
r r
h
t t 2( i 1)
u2
1 3 t t u23( i 1)
r r
h2 h3 t t 3( i 1)
t t 2( i 1)
u2
u2
r r
h h
t t 2( i 1)
u2
3 3 t t u23( i 1)
r r
h1 h3 t t 3( i 1)
t t 2( i 1)
u3
u3
r r
h h
t t 2( i 1)
u3
2 3 t t u33( i 1)
r r
h3 h3 t t 3( i 1)
t t 2( i 1)
u3
u3
r r
t t
u12( i 1)
(3.7)
and
t t
t
( n 1)
BNL
h1
r
1
t
0
l
r
0
h2
r
h3
r
h1
r
h2
r
h3
r
h1
r
h2
r
h3
(3.8)
( i 1)
t tt S11( i 1)
0
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t 11
,
t t ( i 1)
t S11
0
0
t t
t
S ( i 1) [ t tt S11( i 1) ]
(3.9)
t t
t
(i )
X 1,1
, which
yields:
t t
t
(i )
X 1,1
t t l ( i )
r
t
l
r
(3.10)
Note that 2-nodes truss element has constant strains along its length and thus the increment of
Green Lagrange strain can be calculated directly, (i.e. not using differentials truss length as it
was the case of (3.4) ):
88
11( i )
t t ( i ) 2 t t ( i 1) 2
1 l l
t 2
l
2
(3.11)
This yields a bit simpler element formulation (with the same results). However, for the sake of
preserving unified approach to all truss elements, ATENA uses even in this case the equation
(3.4).
s
5
1
6
9
3
8
4
r
x
CCIsoQuad<xxxx>
CCIsoQuad<xxxxx>
CCIsoQuad<xxxx_x>
....
CCIsoQuad<xxxx_x_x_>
....
CCIsoQuad<xxxxxxxxx>
ATENA Theory
89
Node
i
Function hi
i=5
I=6
i=7
i=8
i=9
1
h8
2
1
h9
4
1
(1 r )(1 s )
4
1
h5
2
1
(1 r )(1 s )
4
1
h5
2
1
(1 r )(1 s )
4
1
(1 r )(1 s )
4
1
(1 r 2 )(1 s )
2
1
h9
2
1
(1 s 2 )(1 r )
2
1
h9
2
1
(1 r 2 )(1 s )
2
1
h9
2
1
(1 r )(1 s 2 )
2
1
h9
2
1
(1 r 2 )(1 s 2 )
2
1
h6
2
1
h6
2
1
h9
4
1
h7
2
1
h7
2
1
h9
4
1
h8
2
1
h9
4
Table 3.3-2: Sample points for Gauss integration of 4 nodes CCIsoQuad<...> element.
90
Integration
point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Weight
0.577350269189626
0.577350269189626
1.
0.577350269189626
-0.577350269189626
1.
-0.577350269189626
0.577350269189626
1.
-0.577350269189626
-0.577350269189626
1.
Table 3.3-3: Sample points for Gauss integration 5 to 9 nodes CCIsoQuad<...> elements.
Integrati
on point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Weight
0.774596669241483
0.774596669241483
0.3086419753
0.774596669241483
0.
0.4938271605
0.774596669241483
-0.774596669241483
0.3086419753
0.
0.774596669241483
0.4938271605
0.
0.
0.7901234568
0.
-0.774596669241483
0.4938271605
-0.774596669241483
0.774596669241483
0.3086419753
-0.774596669241483
0.
0.4938271605
-0.774596669241483
-0.774596669241483
0.3086419753
1
2
t t ( i 1)
(i )
( i 1)
(i )
(i )
22( i ) t u2,2
t tt u1,2
t u1,2
t u2,2 t u2,2
1
2
(i )
t 11
(i )
t 12
(i )
33
ATENA Theory
(i ) 2
t 1,1
(i ) 2
t 1,2
(i ) 2
2,1
(i ) 2
2,2
1
(i )
(i )
t u1,2 t u2,1
2
1 t t ( i 1) ( i ) t t ( i 1) ( i ) t t ( i 1) ( i ) t t ( i 1) ( i )
t u1,1 t u1,2 t u2,1 t u2,2 t u1,2 t u1,1 t u2,2 t u2,1
2
1
(i )
(i )
(i )
(i )
u(i )
t1
x1
t t
u1( i ) u1( i )
x
t
1 u (i )
t1
2 x1
(3.12)
91
Displacement derivatives:
t
(i )
i, j
t t ui( i ) t t ui( i 1)
t x j
(3.13)
t t ( i 1)
t i, j
t t ui( i 1)
t x j
(i )
t t
t
BL( i 1) U ( i )
(3.14)
BL( i 1)
t t
t
BL 0 t tt BL( i11)
(3.15)
t t
t BL 0 t h1,2
h1
t x1
0
t h1,2
t h1,1
h2,1
0
t h2,2
h2
t
x
t
0 ...
...
t h2,2
...
t h2,1
0
0
0
t hn ,2
h
... t n
x
1
t hn ,2
t hn ,1
(3.16)
where
hi , j
hi
t x j
x1 hk t x1k
k 1
92
(3.17)
t t
t
BL( i11)
t t ( i 1)
l11 t h1,1
t t ( i 1)
l11 t h1,2
t t ( i 1)
l11 t h1,2 t t l11( i 1) t h1,1
t t ( i 1) h1
l33 t
x1
...
...
...
t t ( i 1)
21 t 1,1
t t ( i 1)
21 t 1,2
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
21 t 1,2
21 t 1,1
t t ( i 1)
11 t 2,1
t t ( i 1)
11 t 2,2
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
11 t 2,2
11 t 2,1
t t ( i 1)
2
33
t
1
l
l
h
h
...
h
h
h
h
l
l
h
h
h
x
t t ( i 1)
21 t 2,1
t t ( i 1)
21 t 2,2
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
21 t 2,2
21 t 2,1
l
l
h
h
t t ( i 1)
21 t n ,1
t t ( i 1)
21 t n ,2
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
21 t n ,2
21 t n ,1
t t ( i 1)
n
33
t
1
h
x
t t ( i 1)
11 t n ,1
t t ( i 1)
11 t n ,2
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
11 t n ,2
11 t n ,1
l
l
l
l
(3.18)
where
t t ( i 1)
11
t hk ,1 t tt u1k ( i 1)
k 1
t t ( i 1)
12
t hk ,2 t tt u1k ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
21
t hk ,1 t tt u2k ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
22
t hk ,2 t tt u2k ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
33
k 1
(3.19)
k 1
k 1
1 n
hk
t
x1 k 1
t t k ( i 1)
t 1
t t
t
ATENA Theory
( i 1)
BNL
t h1,1
h
t 1,2
0
0
h1
t
x1
0
0
t h1,1
t h1,2
0
h2,1
t h2,2
0
0
h2
t
x1
t
0
0
t h2,1
t h2,2
0
...
...
...
...
hn ,1
t hn ,2
0
0
h
... t n
x1
t
0
0
t hn ,1
t hn ,2
(3.20)
93
( i 1)
t tt S11(i 1)
t t (i 1)
t S 21
0
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t 12
t t ( i 1)
t 22
S
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t 11
t t ( i 1)
t 21
0
S
S
t t ( i 1)
t 12
t t ( i 1)
t 22
0
S
S
0
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t S33
0
(3.21)
t
S ( i ) t tt S11(i 1)
t t
t
( i 1)
S 22
t t
t
( i 1)
S 21
t t
t
S33(i 1)
In case of the simplified 3D analysis, i.e. elements CCIsoQuad2_5<...>, the equations are further
extended as follows:
All element matrices and vectors are computed with respect to element local coordinate
system xlocal ,1 , xlocal ,2 using equations in (3.12) through (3.21). They are transformed into
3D global coordinate system by means of simple transformation:
(3.22)
where
M global , M local , vglobal , vlocal are global and local finite element matrices and vectors,
(3.23)
where:
xlocal ,i , xglobal ,i are local and global coordinates (in 2D and 3D space).
The local element coordinate system (see Fig. 3-5) is defined by local xlocal ,1 , xlocal ,2 , xlocal ,3
coordinates. All of them pass through origin of the global (reference) coordinate system. The
axes xlocal ,1 and xlocal ,2 constitute a local coordinates element plane that is parallel to the element..
The axis xlocal ,3 is perpendicular to the element and the axis xlocal ,1 is defined as a projection of
global x1 axis to the local coordinate element plane. An exception to that is, when the element is
normal to the global x1 . In this case the local xlocal ,1 coincides with the global x2 axis.
The present definition of local element coordinate system depends on plane of the finite element
but it does not depend on its shape itself. This is very important property, as ATENA supports
use of local (instead of global) nodal degrees of freedom and, (of course) these degrees of
freedom must refer to a coordinate system common to all elements of the plane, in which they
lie.
94
x3
3
xl o c a l , 3
4
O
X
2
xl o c a l , 2
1
x1
x2
xl o c a l , 1
Full 3D formulation of the CCIsoQuad<...> elements is much the same as that for simplified 3D
elements CCIsoQuad2_5<...>. The only difference is that the matrix t0 BNL will include also terms
related to the out-of-element-plane direction:
t t
t
( i 1)
BNL
t h1,1
h
t 1,2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
t 1,1
h
0
t 1,2
h
0 t h1,2
t 1,1
h2,1 0
0
t h2,2
t
0
0
h2,1 0
0 t h2,2 0
0 0 t h2,1
0 0 t h2,2
0
h3,1 0
0
t h3,2
t
0
0
hN ,1
t hN ,2
h3,1 0
0
......
0 t h3,2 0
0
0 0 t h3,1
0
0 0 t h3,2
0
0
0
0
t
t
hN ,1
hN ,2
0
0
0
0
t hN ,1
t hN ,2
(3.24)
ATENA Theory
95
2D, axisymmetric and 3D problems. Geometry, interpolation functions and integration points of
3
s
CCIsoTriangle<xxx>
...
CCIsoTriangle<xxxxxx>
1
4
s
CCIsoTriangle<xxx>
...
CCIsoTriangle<xxxxxx>
1
4
Node
i
Function hi
96
1 r s
1
h4
2
1
h4
2
i=5
i=6
1
h6
2
1
h5
2
1
h5
2
1
h6
2
4 r (1 r s )
4rs
4 s (1 r s )
Table 3-2: Sample point for Gauss integration of 3 nodes CCIsoTriangle<...> elements.
Integration point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Weight
1/3
1/3
1/2
Table 3-3: Sample points for Gauss integration of 3 to 6 nodes CCIsoTriangle<...> elements.
Integration
point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Weight
1/6
1/6
1/6
2/3
1/6
1/6
1/6
2/3
1/6
All the above expressions for the formulation for plane quadrilateral elements remain valid also
for the triangular elements, including the extension from 2D to simplified and full 3D analysis.
The expressions only use different approximation functions hi ( r, s, t ) and different integration
points [ r , s, t ] , see Table 3-1, Table 3-2, and Table 3-3.
ATENA Theory
97
t
4
10
7
6
r
CCIsoTetra<xxxx>
.............
CCIsoTetra<xxxxxxxxxx>
t
Fig. 3-7 Geometry of CCIsoTetra<...> elements.
t
3
11
4
12
z20
10
19
15
17
8
r
18
CCIsoBrick<xxxxxxxx>
..................
CCIsoBrick<xxxxxxxxx...x>
s
14
6
16
13
5
9
1
z
13
4
x
8
2 15
7
14
12
10
11
r
CCIsoWedge<xxxxxx>
.............
CCIsoWedge<xxxxxxxxxx xxxxx>
98
Node
i
Function hi
1 r s t
1
h5
2
1
h5
2
4 r (1 r s t )
4 rs (1 t )
4 s (1 r s t )
4 rt (1 s )
4 s t (1- r )
10
4t (1- r - s - t )
i=5
i=6
i=7
i=8
i=9
1
h7
2
1
h6
2
1
h6
2
i = 10
1
h10
2
1
h8
2
1
h7
2
1
h9
2
1
h8
2
1
h9
2
1
h10
2
Table 3.5-2 Sample point for Gauss integration of 4 nodes CCIsoTetra<...> element.
Integration point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Coordinate t
Weight
1/4
1/4
1/4
1/6
ATENA Theory
99
Table 3.5-3 Sample points for Gauss integration of 5 to 10 nodes CCIsoTetra<...> elements.
Integration point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Coordinate t
Weight
0.13819660
0.13819660
0.13819660
1/24
0.13819660
0.13819660
0.58541020
1/24
0.58541020
0.13819660
0.13819660
1/24
0.13819660
0.58541020
0.13819660
1/24
Node i
Function hi
i=9
i = 10
i = 11
i = 12
i = 13
i = 14
1
1
(1 r )(1 s)(1 t ) h 9
8
2
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t )
8
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t )
8
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t )
8
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t )
8
1
h13
2
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t )
8
1
1
h13 h14
2
2
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t )
8
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t )
8
100
i = 15
i = 16
1
h12
2
i = 17
i = 18
i = 19
i = 20
1
h17
2
1
1
h9 h10
2
2
1
h18
2
1
1
h10 h11
2
2
1
h19
2
1
1
h11 h12
2
2
1
h20
2
1
1
h16 h17
2
2
1
h18
2
1
1
h14 h15
2
2
1
1
h15 h16
2
2
1
h19
2
1
h20
2
1
(1 r 2 )(1 s )(1 t )
4
10
1
(1 r )(1 s 2 )(1 t )
4
11
1
(1 r 2 )(1 s )(1 t )
4
12
1
(1 r )(1 s 2 )(1 t )
4
13
1
(1 r 2 )(1 s )(1 t )
4
14
1
(1 r )(1 s 2 )(1 t )
4
15
1
(1 r 2 )(1 s )(1 t )
4
16
1
(1 r )(1 s 2 )(1 t )
4
17
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t 2 )
4
18
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t 2 )
8
19
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t 2 )
4
20
1
(1 r )(1 s )(1 t 2 )
4
ATENA Theory
101
Table 3.5-4 Sample points for Gauss integration of 8 nodes CCIsoBrick<...> element.
Integration
point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Coordinate t
Weight
0.5773502691896
26
0.5773502691896 0.577350269189626
26
1.
0.5773502691896
26
0.5773502691896
26
0.577350269189626
1.
0.5773502691896
26
0.577350269189626
0.5773502691896
26
1.
0.5773502691896
26
0.5773502691896 0.577350269189626
26
1.
0.5773502691896
26
0.5773502691896 0.577350269189626
26
1.
0.5773502691896
26
0.5773502691896
26
0.577350269189626
1.
0.5773502691896
26
0.577350269189626
0.5773502691896
26
1.
0.5773502691896
26
0.5773502691896 0.577350269189626
26
1.
Table 3.5-5 Sample points for Gauss integration of 9 to 20 nodes CCIsoBrick<...> element.
Integration
point
Coordinate r
0.7745966692414
83
0.7745966692414 0.774596669241483
83
0.1714677641
0.7745966692414
83
0.7745966692414
83
0.2743484225
0.7745966692414
83
0.7745966692414
83
0.774596669241483
102
Coordinate s
Coordinate t
0.
Weight
0.1714677641
0.7745966692414
83
0.
0.774596669241483
0.2743484225
0.7745966692414
83
0.
0.
0.4389574760
0.7745966692414
83
0.
0.774596669241483
0.2743484225
0.7745966692414
83
0.774596669241483
0.7745966692414
83
0.1714677641
0.7745966692414
83
0.7745966692414
83
10
0.
0.7745966692414 0.774596669241483
83
0.2743484225
11
0.
0.7745966692414
83
0.4389574760
12
0.
0.7745966692414
83
0.774596669241483
13
0.
0.
0.774596669241483
0.4389574760
14
0.
0.
0.
0.7023319616
15
0.
0.
0.774596669241483
0.4389574760
16
0.
0.774596669241483
0.7745966692414
83
0.2743484225
17
0.
0.7745966692414
83
18
0.
0.7745966692414 0.774596669241483
83
0.2743484225
19
0.7745966692414
83
0.7745966692414 0.774596669241483
83
0.1714677641
20
0.7745966692414
83
0.7745966692414
83
0.2743484225
ATENA Theory
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.2743484225
0.2743484225
0.4389574760
103
0.7745966692414
83
0.774596669241483
0.1714677641
21
0.7745966692414
83
22
0.7745966692414
83
0.
0.774596669241483
0.2743484225
23
0.7745966692414
83
0.
0.
0.4389574760
24
0.7745966692414
83
0.
0.774596669241483
0.2743484225
25
0.7745966692414
83
0.774596669241483
0.7745966692414
83
0.1714677641
26
0.7745966692414
83
0.7745966692414
83
27
0.7745966692414
83
0.7745966692414 0.774596669241483
83
0.
0.2743484225
0.1714677641
104
Node I
Function
hi
i=8
i=9
i = 10
hh1 hv1
1
h7
2
hh2 hv1
1
h7
2
hh3 hv1
hh1 hv2
1
h10
2
hh2 hv2
1
h10
2
hh3 hv2
hh4 hv1
hh5 hv1
hh6 hv1
10
hh4 hv2
11
hh5 hv2
12
hh6 hv2
13
hh1 hv3
14
hh2 hv3
15
hh3 hv3
i = 11
i = 12
1
h9
2
i = 13
i = 15
1
h13
2
1
h8
2
1
h8
2
i = 14
1
h14
2
1
h9
2
1
h15
2
1
h12
2
1
h13
2
1
h11
2
1
h11
2
1
h14
2
1
h12
2
1
h15
2
Table 3.5-7 Sample points for Gauss integration of 6 nodes CCIsoWedge<...> element.
Integration point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Coordinate t
Weight
1/6
1/6
0.577350269189626
1/6
2/3
1/6
0.577350269189626
1/6
1/6
2/3
0.577350269189626
1/6
1/6
1/6
-0.577350269189626
1/6
2/3
1/6
-0.577350269189626
1/6
1/6
2/3
-0.577350269189626
1/6
ATENA Theory
105
Table 3.5-8 Sample points for Gauss integration of 7 to 15 nodes CCIsoWedge<...> element.
Integration point
Coordinate r
Coordinate s
Coordinate t
Weight
1/6
1/6
0.774596669241483
0.0925925926
2/3
1/6
0.774596669241483
0.0925925926
1/6
2/3
0.774596669241483
0.0925925926
1/6
1/6
0.
0.1481448148
2/3
1/6
0.
0.1481448148
1/6
2/3
0.
0.1481448148
1/6
1/6
-0.774596669241483
0.0925925926
2/3
1/6
-0.774596669241483
0.0925925926
1/6
2/3
-0.774596669241483
0.0925925926
ij( i )
1 t t ( i 1) ( i ) t t ( i 1) ( i ) 1
1
(i )
(i )
(i )
(i )
t ui , j t u j ,i
t uk ,i
t uk , j
t uk , j t uk ,i
t uk ,i t uk , j
2
2
2
(3.25)
t t ui( i ) t t ui( i 1)
t x j
(3.26)
t t ( i 1)
t i, j
t t
( i 1)
i
u
xj
t
(i ) t tt BL( i 1) U (i )
(i ) t 11(i )
22(i )
(3.27)
U ( i ) t t U ( i ) t t U (i 1)
u11(i )
u1(2 i )
u31(i )
u12(i )
u22(i )
u2n (i )
u3n (i )
BL( i 1)
t t
t
BL 0 t tt BL( i11)
(3.28)
t h1,1
0
0
t t
t L0
t h1,2
0
t h1,3
t 1,2
t 1,3
h
t h1,3
0
t h1,2
h2,2
0
h2,1
t h2,3
t 1,1
h2,3
t 1,1
h2,1
t
...
h2,2
...
h2,3 ...
hn ,2
0
hn ,1
t hn ,3
hn ,3
0 ...
...
t h2,2
h2,1 ...
hn ,1
0
t
hn ,2
0
0
h
t n ,3
t hn ,2
t hn ,1
(3.29)
where
hi , j
hi
t x j
(3.30)
t t
t
BL( i11)
t t ( i 1)
l11 t h1,1
t t ( i 1)
l12 t h1,2
t t ( i 1)
l t h1,3
t t ( i 1) 13 t
t ( i 1)
l11 t h1,2 l11 t h1,1
t t l12( i 1) t h1,3 t t l13( i 1) h1,2
t
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
l
h
11 t 1,3
13 t h1,1
t t ( i 1)
21 t 1,1
t t ( i 1)
22 t 1,2
t t ( i 1)
23 t 1,3
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
21 t 1,2
21 t 1,1
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
23 t 1,2
22 t 1,3
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
21 t 1,3
23 t 1,1
l
l
h
h
l
l
h
h
l
l
h
h
t t ( i 1)
31 t 1,1
t t ( i 1)
32 t 1,2
t t ( i 1)
33 t 1,3
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
31 t 1,2
31 t 1,1
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
32 t 1,3
33 t 1,2
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
31 t 1,3
33 t 1,1
l
l
h
h
l
l
h
h
l
l
h
h
t t ( i 1)
11 t 2,1
t t ( i 1)
12 t 2,2
t t ( i 1)
13 t 2,3
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
11 t 2,2
12 t 2,1
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
12 t 2,3
13 t 2,2
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
11 t 2,3
13 t 2,1
l
l
h
h
l
l
h
h
l
l
h
h
(3.31)
...
...
...
...
...
...
h
h
t t ( i 1)
31 t n ,1
t t ( i 1)
31 t n ,2
t t ( i 1)
33 t n ,3
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
31 t n ,2
32 t n ,1
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
32 t n ,3
33 t n ,2
t t ( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
31 t n ,3
33 t n ,1
l
l
h
h
l
l
h
h
l
l
where
t t ( i 1)
ij
ATENA Theory
t hk , j
k 1
t t k ( i 1)
t i
(3.32)
107
t t
t
( i 1)
BNL
t h1,1
h
t 1,2
t h1,3
0
0
0
0
0
0
h2,1 ...
hn ,1
h2,2 ...
hn ,2
0
t h1,1
0
0
hn ,3
0
0
t hn ,1
h
t h1,3
0
0
0
0
...
...
0
0
t 1,1
...
h
t h1,3
0
0
...
...
0
0
0
0
t 1,2
0
0
t 1,2
h2,3 ...
0 ...
hn ,2
t hn ,3
0
0
0
0
t hn ,1
t hn ,2
t hn ,3
(3.33)
S ( i 1)
t tt S11( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
t S21
t tt S31( i 1)
0
0
0
0
0
0
S ( i ) t tt S11( i 1)
t t ( i 1)
t 12
t t ( i 1)
t 22
t t ( i 1)
t 32
t t ( i 1)
t 13
t t ( i 1)
t 23
t t ( i 1)
t 33
S
S
S
S
S
0
0
t t
t
S
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
( i 1)
S22
t t
t
S33( i 1)
0
0
0
S
S
t t ( i 1)
t 11
t t ( i 1)
t 21
t t ( i 1)
t 31
S
0
0
0
0
0
S
S
t t ( i 1)
t 12
t t ( i 1)
t 22
t t ( i 1)
t 32
S
0
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t 12
( i 1)
S23
0
0
0
0
0
S
S
0
0
0
0
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t 13
t t ( i 1)
t 23
t t ( i 1)
t 33
S
0
0
0
t t
t
0
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t 13
0
S
S
t t ( i 1)
t 11
t t ( i 1)
t 21
t t ( i 1)
t 31
0
S
S
t t ( i 1)
t 12
t t ( i 1)
t 22
t t ( i 1)
t 32
0
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t S13
t t ( i 1)
t S 23
t t ( i 1)
t S33
0
0
(3.34)
Ri
ui kA
n direction
(3.35)
where
k is spring material stiffness parameter set by &MATERIAL SPRING command,
(parameter k has character of multi-linear Young modulus),
CCSpring
CCLineSpring
ATENA Theory
109
CCPlaneSpring
CCSpring
area A
y
A1
A
A
, 2 2 , 3 3
A
A
A
1 2 3 1
110
(3.36)
F ( i ) 1 (2 1 1) 2 (2 2 1) 3 (2 3 1) 4 1 2
(3.38)
4 2 3
4 3 1
(3.39)
A general procedure to construct the element stiffness matrix is described by the set of following
equations:
(a) The constitutive equation:
s De
(3.40)
u x, y
x
, y
v x, y
y
u x, y
y
v x, y
x
(3.41)
which is written in terms of the natural coordinates i and the nodal displacements vectors u, v:
( i ) F T
u
v
(3.42)
K F DF dV
(3.43)
The matrix F contains partial derivatives of the interpolation function F and the integral in the
last equation is made over the element volume V. The details of the derivation can be found in
FELIPPA 1966 and here only the final matrix equations are presented.
Fig. 3-13 Quadrilateral element (b) composed from two triangular elements (a).
The quadrilateral finite element is composed from two 4-node triangular elements, as shown in
Fig. 3-13. Two degrees of freedom in a node are the horizontal and vertical displacements. The
triangular element is derived from the 6-node triangle by imposing kinematic constraints on two
mid-side nodes. The resulting strain-displacement matrix relation for the 4-node triangle is:
ATENA Theory
111
e Bd
e x U O
u
e y O V
g V U v
(3.44)
where ex, ey are the normal strain vectors, g is the shear strain vector (engineering type) and O is
the null matrix. The strain and displacement vectors contain nodal components:
e x x1 x 2
x 3 , e y y1 y 2 y 3 , g x1 x 2 x 3
(3.45)
u u1 u2 u3 u4 , v v1 v2 v3 v4
(3.46)
The strain interpolation function in the element is linear and is uniquely specified by three nodal
values in the corners of the triangular element, while the displacement interpolation function is
quadratic and is specified by three corners and one mid-side nodal displacement. The
components ui, vi are the horizontal and vertical displacements, respectively, in the node i. The
indexes 1, 2 and 3 denote the corner nodes of a sub-triangle and the index 4 is for the mid-side
node, see Fig. 3-13 (a). The strain-displacement sub-matrices in (3.44) are
b2
b3
3b1 2b3
1
U
b1
3b2 b3 b3
2S
b2
b3
b1
4b2
4b1
.
a2
3a1 2a3
1
V
a1
3a2 a3
2S
a1
a2
4a2
4a1
.
a3
a3
a3
(3.47)
a1 x3 x2 b1 y2 y3
a2 x1 x3 b2 y3 y1
a3 x2 x1 b3 y1 y2
2S a3 b2 a2 b3
where xi, yi are the global Cartesian coordinates of the node i in a sub-triangle, S is the area of the
sub-triangle.
The element stiffness matrix for the 4-node sub-triangle is
K
K uu
K vu
Kuv
K vv
(3.48)
The stiffness matrix K has an order 8 and is so partitioned that the upper four rows correspond to
the horizontal displacement components (index u) and the lower four rows correspond to the
vertical displacement components (index v). The integration of the stiffness coefficients is made
exactly and the resulting sub-matrices are:
K uu St d11 A d13 ( H H T ) d 33 C
K vv St d 22 C d 23 ( H HT ) d33 A
K uv St d12 H d13 A d 23 C d33 H T
112
(3.49)
where t is the thickness of the element, dij are the coefficients of the material stiffness matrix D,
(3.40). The integration in (3.43) is done explicitly by the following matrix multiplication:
A UT QU, H UT QV, C VT QV
(3.50)
2 1 1
1
Q
1 2 1
12
1 1 2
(3.51)
The element stiffness matrix of the 5-node quadrilateral, Fig. 3-13(b), is composed of the two 4node sub-triangles by summing the stiffness coefficients of the appropriate nodes. The resulting
matrix of the 5-node quadrilateral K10 has the order 10. The coefficients of the matrix can be
rearranged according to the external (index e) and internal (index i) degrees of freedom:
K
K10 ee
K ie
K ei
K ii
(3.52)
K K ee K ei K ii K ie
(3.53)
The subdivision of the quadrilateral element into the triangular elements must be done in an
optimal way and it is preformed automatically by the program. The examples of the subdivisions
are illustrated by Fig. 3-14. Due to this method of the subdivision, a concave form of the
quadrilateral element is acceptable. This element form could not be achieved by an isoparametric
element.
(3.54)
where R is the vector of nodal forces (same arrangement and numbering as in the vector d in
(3.44)). The matrix Q9 contains three integration matrices Q in the diagonal. The stress vector s9
ATENA Theory
113
(same numbering as the vector e, (3.40), is calculated from the current strains and secant material
matrix, Section 2.1.12.
There are two variations of this element in program ATENA: CCQ10<xxxx> and
CCQ10Sbeta<xxxx>. The main difference between these two elements lies in the way how the
resisting forces are calculated. In case CCQ10<xxxx>, they are computed as described by
Equation (3.54). In the second case, however, the material law is evaluated only at the element
centroid. Based on the current state of damage a secant constitutive matrix is calculated and it is
used to determine the integration point stresses and resulting resisting forces. This element type
is almost identical to the element that was implemented in the program SBETA, i.e. the former
version of this program. Due to this approach there are some limitations for usage of this element
with respect to some material models. It can be only used with material models that are able to
calculate and exact secant constitutive matrix. This means that only the following material
models can be used with the element CCQ10Sbeta<xxxx>: CCElastIsotropic and
CCSbetaMaterial.
114
Each cable has two ends provided with anchors. The anchor, where the pre-stressing force is
applied is denoted as the active anchor, the anchor on the other side is the passive anchor. The
points between the anchors are called deviators (or links). After applying pre-stressing the cable
is fixed at anchors. In the deviators, cable can slide while its movements and the forces are
governed by the law of dry friction. The slips of the cable in the deviators (the relative
displacement of the cable ends with respect to the deviators) are denoted as 1, 2, They are
introduced as variables to be determined by the analysis.
The forces, F1 and F2 acting on a deviator i are the cable forces at the adjacent cable sections,
Fig. 3-16. Their difference Pi = F1 -F2, (F1> F2) is the loss of the pre-stressing force due to
friction in the deviator i. The relation between these forces according to the law of friction is
expressed as:
F2 F1 exp( i ) Q
ATENA Theory
(3.55)
115
In this expression i is the angular change of the cable direction at the deviator i and is the
friction coefficient. In the above equation the constant part of the friction Q = k R i , where k is
the cohesion (a constant part of the friction ) of the cable of a unit length and R is the radius of
the deviator. The product Ri is the length on which is the cohesion k acting. If the constant part
of friction is neglected the term Q is zero.
Fig. 3-17 Forces and displacements in the cable element (cable section).
A section of the cable between the deviators is considered as the uniaxial bar element, Fig. 3-17.
The force F in the cable element depends on: the pre-stressing force P, the displacements of ends
u1, u2 due to structural deformation and the cable slips 1, 2 in the deviators. The slip is
introduced as an additional variable for the external cables. The equilibrium equation of the
cable section is:
F P k (u2 u1 2 1 )
(3.56)
The element stiffness k = Es A/L, where A, L are the cable cross section and the length,
respectively, and Es is the actual secant or tangent modulus derived in the same way as in case of
other reinforcement using bilinear or multi-linear law.
The cable forces F1, F2,, are determined by applying the above equations in all cable deviators
and by simultaneous solution for slips i .
Introduction of pre-stressing is accomplished by applying an initial slip (cable pull-out) at the
anchor end until a prescribed pre-stressing force is reached. This procedure reflects a real
process of pre-stessing and takes into account the loss of pre-stressing due to friction deviators
and deformation of the structure.
116
1
1
2
2
i-1
i
i-1
i+1
m
m+1
undeformed truss i
deformed truss i
lo
i+1
i+1
(ui i i 1 ui i )
E
li
(3.57)
Its derivative is compared with the cohesion stress. If the cohesion stress between the bar and the
surrounding concrete is becoming too high, the bar will slip to reduce this stress. Otherwise, the
slips will remain unchanged (or initially equal to zero), which correspond to the case of
perfect bond. The cohesion stress can be constant or it can be defined as a function of .
c c ( )
(3.58)
The equilibrium condition for reinforcement bar with prescribed bond yields:
p
c
x
A
(3.59)
where is stress in the bar, x is local coordinate axis in direction of the bar and p, A means
perimeter and cross sectional area of the bar.
Discretized form of (3.59) for node i reads (the bars are of constant strain type):
A( i i 1 )
li li 1
p c
2
(3.60)
If the above equation is written for all nodes on the bar, we obtain a set of inequalities. It has to
be solved in iterative manner (within each iteration of the main solution loop).
In order to obtain more realistic shape, the resulting cohesion stresses are prior their output
smoothed. The smoothing operation for node i is expressed as follows:
ATENA Theory
117
right
left
i 1li 1 i li
li 1 li
i li i 1li 1
li li 1
(3.61)
( right left ) A
p li
The equation (3.57) together with (3.60) completes the element description. The element can be
used to model realistically cohesion between reinforcement bar and concrete. Such a model is
needed for analysis of pullout tests etc. Although the adopted solution is fairly simple, it
provides reasonable results accuracy at low computation cost. A more elaborate model of
cohesion between reinforcement bar and surrounding concrete can be achieved by using special
interface elements that is described in the next section.
118
Linear geometry
v
Nonlinear geometry
2D
r,u(r)
2
4
3D
r,u(r,s)
r,u(r,s)
r,
u(r)
4
6
3
CCIsoGap<xxxxx_x>
3
CCIsoGap<xxxx>
v
5
2
8
5
9
4
3
12
11
s,v(r,s)
s,v(r,s)
CCIsoGap<xxxxxxxxxxxx>
CCIsoGap<xxxxxx>
13
r,u(r,s) 6
10
2
4
3
8
7
CCIsoGap<xxxxxxxx>
r,u(r,s) 6
14
10
3
11
15
12
4
16
s,v(r,s)
s,v(r,s)
CCIsoGap<xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
The interface is defined by a pair of lines, (or surfaces in 3D) each located on the opposite side
of interface. In the original (i.e. undeformed) geometry, the interface lines/surfaces can share the
same position, or they can be separated by a small distance. In this case we speak about the
interface with nonzero thickness.
In the following, the interface behavior is explained on a simple 2-dimensional case, see section
2.6 for a full description of the interface material.
The interface element has two states:
Closed state: There is full interaction of the contact sides. In addition, friction sliding of
the interface is possible in case of interface element with a friction model.
Penalty method is employed to model the above behavior of the interface. For this purpose we
define a constitutive matrix of the interface in the form:
F K
F tt
F 0
ATENA Theory
0 u
Du
K nn v
(3.62)
119
in which u , v are the relative displacements of the interface sides (sliding and opening
displacements of the interface) in the local coordinate system r , s and K tt , K nn are the shear and
normal stiffness, respectively. This coefficient can be regarded as stiffness of one material layer
(real, or fictious) having a finite thickness. It should be understood that the layer is only a
numerical tool to handle the gap opening and closing. F , F are forces at the interface, (again
at the local coordinate system).
The actual derivation of gap elements is now demonstrated for the case of linear 2D gap element
CCIsoGap<xxxx>, see Fig. 3-19. The other elements are constructed in a similar way.
The element has two degrees of freedom defined in the local coordinate system, which is aligned
with the gap direction. They are relative displacements v, u and are defined as follows:
1
h1 (1 r ),
2
1
h2 (1 r )
2
u h1u1,4 h2 u2,3
u
v h1v1,4 h2 v2,3
h
u 1
0
h2
h2
h1
h2
0
h2
h1
0
u1
v
1
u2
0 v2
Bu
h1 u3
v3
u
4
v4
(3.63)
The rest of the element derivation is the same as in case of any other elements, i.e. the stiffness
matrix K T DBdV , vector of internal forces Q T FdV etc. A numerical integration in
two Gauss points is used to integrate the interface element stiffness matrix. The matrix K a nd
the vector Q are in local coordinate system and therefore before they are assembled in the
problem governing equations they must be transformer in global coordinates.
The stiffness coefficients depend on the gap state. The interface is considered open, if the normal
force F >Rti (Rti is the interface tensile strength force) and the corresponding constitutive law is
(stress free interface):
F 0
F 0
(3.64)
The stiffness coefficients are set to small, but nonzero values K ttop , K nnop .
The interface element is considered closed if F Rti. The stiffness coefficients are set to large
values K ttcl , K nncl . It should be noted that the stiffness coefficients are defined only for the purpose
of the numerical iterative solution. (Hint: The values of coefficients in the closed state (the large
120
values) are based on thickness comparable to the size of neighbor quadrilateral elements. The
minimum values in the open state can be about 1000 times smaller. )
The interface thickness in the out-of plane direction is normally provided as an input parameter.
In the case of axi-symmetric analysis it is however calculated using the formula:
t 2 x
(3.65)
ATENA Theory
121
Note that the option of the gap's initial opening and the reset displacements flag can be
combined. Both these special processing options are possible, because the ATENA software uses
incremental approach to solve the structure. Thus changing shape of the gap (at the end of the
steps) will not harm governing equilibrium equations.
y
2
CCCircumferentialTruss
CCCircumferentialTruss2
122
In the following structural vectors and matrices for the CCIsoTruss element are derived.
Development of the CCIsoTruss2 is much the same. In fact, it is CCIsoTruss acting at the centrepoint of the CCIsoTruss2 element with its cross-sectional area calculated as explained above.
The element vectors and matrices for Total Lagrangian formulation (TL), configuration at time t
and iteration (i) are as follows. Note that they are equally applicable for Updated Lagrangian
formulation (UL) upon applying changes related to the element reference co-ordinate system
(undeformed vs. deformed element axis.).
The truss element center has at reference time t and t t ( i 1) co-ordinates t X [t x1 , t x1 ] and
t t ( i 1)
( i 1)
X [t t
t
l 2 t x1 and
( i 1)
(i )
t 11
( t t x1 t t
( i 1)
t t ( i )
t t ( i ) t t
t 11
t t ( i ) 2 t t ( i 1) 2
1 l l
2
tl
4 2
x u
t
1
1
1( i 1)
1
with
(3.66)
x
t
1( i )
t 1
t 1
1
1( i 1) 1( i )
1
t 1
t 1 2
u
u
u
x
x1
(i )
(i )
t 11
Separating
1 2
1
1 u
2 x
1( i )
t 1
t 1
1
(3.67)
BL 0
t t
t
( i 1)
L1
t t
t
( n 1)
BNL
1
x11
u11( i 1)
1 2
1
(3.68)
(3.69)
and
1
x
t
1 2
1
(3.70)
ATENA Theory
S ( i 1)
t t
t
S ( i 1) [ t tt S11( i 1) ]
(3.71)
123
(i )
1,1
1 e
(i )
t 11
x11 t u11( i )
t
t t
t
(i )
X 1,1
, which
(3.72)
x11
(i )
t 11
t t ( i )
t
l
l
2 t 1 t 1( i ) 2
2 t 1 2
4 x1 u1 4 x1
2
4 2 t x11
t 1
x1
(3.73)
124
The essential point in the elements derivation is that displacements and rotations fields are
approximated "independently", (see e.g. (Jendele 1981), where similar approach is used for
plates). This means that they are handled separately. Unlike in true Mindlin theory our
formulation matches geometric equations automatically. However, a special technique is used to
improve the elements shear behaviour (Hinton and Owen 1984).
The first formulation of this element proposed by Ahmad was linear but since that time many
improvements have been achieved. The most important is the application of reduced or selective
integration scheme that reduces or totally removes locking of the element. Also, many authors
extended the original formulation to geometrically and later also materially nonlinear analysis.
One such an advanced form of the element is the formulation implemented in ATENA.
On input, the Ahmad element uses the same geometry as 20 nodes isoparametric brick element,
i.e. CCIsoBrick<xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, see Fig. 3-25. This is needed, in order to be able to
use the same pre- and postprocessors support for the shell and native 3D brick (i.e. hexahedron)
elements. After the 1st step of the analysis, the input geometry will automatically change to the
external geometry from Fig. 3-25. As nodes 17 and 18 contain only so called bubble function,
the element is post-processed in the same way is it would be the element
CCIsoBrick<xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>. Internally, all elements vectors and matrices are derived
based on the internal geometry as depicted also in Fig. 3-25.
With shell elements, the best connection at edges is to cut both at 45 degrees, or a different
corresponding angle if the thicknesses are not the same, or if connected at other than right angle,
see Fig. 3-22 (a). Another option is to use a volume brick element at the corner, which is the only
feasible way when more than two shells are connected, see Fig. 3-22 (b). The nodes on the
surface connected to the volume element have to be listed in the INTERFACE subcommand in
the shell geometry definition for correct behavior. Connecting like in Fig. 3-23 is not
recommended, as the master-slave relations induced by the fixed thickness of the shell may
cause numerical problems.
Shell1
Brick
Shell2
Shell3
(a)
(b)
ATENA Theory
125
126
X 3G . Hence:
t
t
t
V3 V3 1 , V3 2 , V3 3
t
t
t
t
t
t
V1 V1 1 , V1 2 , V1 3 V3 3 , 0, V3 1
(3.74)
t
t
0
t
t
If V3 is parallel to X 2G (i.e. V3 1 V3 3 0 ), V1 is defined by
t
V1 V3 2 , 0, 0
(3.75)
t
After that, the coordinate system V1k , V2k , V3k itself is defined. The vector V3k is constructed in
t
the same way as was the vector V3 , however, current, i.e. deformed configuration is used. The
ATENA Theory
t
t
V2k V3k V1
t
(3.76)
(3.77)
127
The vectors V1k , V2k , V3k define local nodal shell coordinate system in which the shell rotations
are specified. As already mention, the original formulation of the element has 5 DOFs per nodes.
These are 3 displacements, expressed in the global coordinate systems and two rotations , .
t
They are rotations along the vectors V1k , V2k . It comes from definition that V3 need not be
normal to the element surface. It must only connect the top and bottom nodes of the shell.
t
Sometimes, it is advantageous to modify the nodal coordinate system so that V3k remains
t
unchanged but V1k and V2k are rotated (along V3k ) to a certain direction. Note however, that
t
X 2L X 3L V1k
X 1L X 2L X 3L
(3.78)
(3.79)
As the nodal coordinate system V1k , V2k , V3k can rotate along V3k , the local coordinate system
t
would X 1L , X 2L , X 3L rotate simultaneously along X 3L . This definition allows for user defined
shell local coordinate system that is common for all shell elements, irrespective of their
t
incidences. Note that unlike V3k the vector X 3L is always normal to the element mid-plane
surface.
Curvilinear coordinate system
This system is used to calculate derivatives and integration in element integration points. Its
coordinates are r , s for in-plane direction and t in direction of element thickness, see Fig. 3-24.
The in-plane displacements are approximated by Lagrange, Hetherosis or Serendipity
approximation similar 2D isoparametric elements. For the 3rd direction, i.e. through the depth of
the element. linear approximation is used within the frame of the shell layer concept.
128
11
4
t3
12
20
19
15
18
14
17
8
r
Input geometry
10
16
13
5
11
4
t3
12
10
117
15
8
r
External geometry
18
16
s
14
6
13
Internal geometry
1
3
4
9
5
8
6
ATENA Theory
129
Fig. 3-26 Degenerate shell Ahmad element coordinate systems and degree of freedoms
(DOFs)
130
t x1
t x1k ,top
t x1k ,bot
N
1 t t k ,top 1 t t k ,bot
t t
x2 x hk 2 x2 2 x2
k 1
t x3
t x3k ,top
t x3k ,bot
(3.80)
where N=8 is number of nodes per element, (geometry is always interpolated by 8-nodes
Serendipity interpolation, irrespective of displacement interpolation), h(r,s) is k-th interpolation
t x1k ,bot
t x1k ,top
function, r,s,t are isoparametric coordinates (see Fig. 3-25), t x2k ,top and t x2k ,bot are vector of
t x3k ,bot
t x3k ,top
node k
Using the above the equation (3.80) can be rewritten in the following form:
t k ,mid
t V3k
1
x1
x1
N
t t
t k ,mid t t k
x2 x hk x2 2 V3 2 thick k
k 1
t x3
t x3k ,mid
t k
V3 3
(3.81)
where thick k is element thickness in node k (i.e. distance between top and bottom points) and
t x1top t x1bot
t x1mid
1 t top t bot
t mid
x2 2 x2 x2
t xtop t xbot
t x3mid
k
3 k 3 k
(3.82)
ATENA Theory
131
degrees of freedom per node, see Fig. 3-26. These are t u1mid ,t u2mid ,t u3mid ,t ,t , where
t mid t mid t mid
u1 , u2 , u3 are displacements of the elements node at the mid-surface and t ,t are
rotations with respect to vectors v1k and v 2k respectively. These degree of freedoms (DOFs) are
used throughout the whole elements development. However, in order to improve compatibility
of the present shell element with other 3D elements implemented in ATENA, externally the
T
element uses t u1top ,t u2top ,t u3top ,t u1bot ,t u2bot DOFs, i.e. displacements at the top and bottom of the
element. The 6th displacement, i.e. u3bot is eliminated due to application of shell theory that
assumes 33 0 .
Approximation of the original three "displacement" and two rotation degrees of freedom is
independent. Nevertheless, the curvatures used in governing element equations use all of them in
the sense dictated by geometric equations. This approach enables to satisfy not only equilibrium
equations for membrane stresses and in-plane shear (in mid-surface) as it is the case of popular
Kirchhoff hypothesis, but also to satisfy equilibrium condition for transversal shears (normal to
mid-surface).
Note that in the following derivation of the element we will deal with the original set of
elements DOFs , see (10). Every point thus has five degree of freedom,
T
t V2k
1
t
V k
22
t k
V2 3
V1k 1
t k
t k
V1 2 t k
t k
V1 3
(3.83)
The original displacement vector at point k has the form t u1mid ,t u2mid ,t u3mid ,t ,t . Unlike in the
case of geometry approximation, were N=8, displacements approximation accounts also for
displacement in the element mid-point, i.e. N=9. The ninth function h is so called bubble
function.
u k ,mid [ t u1k ,mid , t u2k ,mid , t u3k ,mid ]
t
V3k
node k
k
t
t
V2k
V1k
t
0 ij
1 t
0 ui, j 0t u j ,i 0t uk ,i 0t uk , j
2
(3.84)
Using the above equation and applying the Von-Karman assumption, Eqn. (3.84) can be written
as:
t u1
2
t
t
x1
1 u3
t u2
2 t x1
t
0 11
t
2
1 t u3
t
x2
0 22 t u t u t
2 0t12 t 1 t 2 2 x2 0t L 0t NL
t x2 x1 t u t u
t 3 t 3
2 0 13 t
t
u
2 t 1 3 x2 x1
0 23 t x t x
3
1
0
t
t
u2 u3
0
t x t x
3
2
(3.85)
The in-plane displacements are much smaller than transverse displacement and thus their
derivatives in 2nd order terms can be neglected.
and 0t NL represents linear and nonlinear part of strain vector, respectively. More
information about their calculation is beyond the scope of this publication. It is available e.g. in
(Jendele 1992).
t
0 L
ATENA Theory
133
To compute internal forces we will use 2nd Piolla Kirchhoff tensor in vector form (in a node k):
0t S 0t S11
k
t
0
S22
t
0 12
t
0 13
t
0
S23
(3.86)
Note that that it is possible to abbreviate full 3 by 3 element tensor to the above vector, because
of adopting Von Karmann simplifying assumption.
(3.87)
a9 ai hi (r 0, s 0) a9
(3.88)
i 1
where hi are values of interpolation function at point (0,0), ai are corresponding node values,
a9 is departure in the center (i.e. computed value corresponding to degree of freedom at center)
and a9 is total value in center.
Depending on combination how many nodes and integration points are used, we distinguish the
Serendipity, Lagrange and Heterosis degenerated element variants, see Fig. 3-29.
134
Serendipity element.
This element was used in the original Ahmad work. It comprises eight nodal points (center point
corresponding to bubble function is omitted).
Gauss integration scheme is used for integration . It can be integrated by full, reduced or
selective integration procedure. Using full integration ,i.e. at three by three sample points,
element exhibits shear locking for thin and even moderately thick element. If reduced integration
is used. the problem of locking is significantly improved without creating spurious energy modes
on structure level. However, in case of thin element there are two non communicable spurious
energy mode on element level.
It should be noted that there were reported some difficulties, if some unfavorable constraints are
applied. Nevertheless the element is popular. If reduced integration is used the provided results
are relatively good.
Fig. 3-29 Node notation for element variants of the Ahmad shell element
ATENA Theory
135
Heterosis element.
The Heterosis element is very similar to Lagrangian element. The difference is that it assumes
first three DOFs at the element centre to be constrained, (i.e. only the rotations are retained)
The element exhibits better behavior compared with previous quadratic elements and especially
in combination with selective integration scheme no locking is produced. With reduced
integration the element provides results better than Lagrangian element. In that case there are
some spurious mechanisms, but for practical solution there are not probable.
Problem of membrane and shear locking for linear analysis are summarized in Fig. 3-30. In the
case of nonlinearity, the situation is much more complicated and depends primarily on the
material state at the sampling points. For more information refer to (Jendele, Chan et al. 1992)
Elements integration
In previous paragraphs we mentioned many time full, reduced and selective integration scheme.
The sense of these procedures is best to demonstrate in Fig. 3-31.
136
The steps during selective integration of shear can been explained on example of integration
arbitrary function f ( r , s ) :
1/ First we calculate the value of f at sampling points that corresponds to two by two integration
rule, i.e
f (-0.5773, -0.5773), f (-0.5773, 0.5773), f (0.5773, -0.5773), f (0.5773, 0.5773)
2/ Using bilinear approximation we calculate the values of f at points that correspond to three by
three integration rule. There are two possibility to that.
The first one is based on original approximation area and the main idea is that we calculate the
value of function f at "corners" of isoparametric element (i.e. r 1., s 1. ):
ATENA Theory
137
(3.89)
'
i i
where fi are element nodal values of function f and hi' are interpolation functions corresponding
to two by two interpolation and a node i.
The set of equation (3.89) can be solved for fi . Having these value we can bi-linearly
approximate function f and compute function value at any point, i.e. also at sampling points
corresponding to three by three integration rule.
The second and more elegant solution is direct approximation. The interpolation function hi are
presented for an square area of the size 2x2 units, but they can be extended to a rectangular of
any size, as shown in Fig. 3-32.
Since the functional values for the 2x2 sampling points in the corner of the square
lr ls 2 x0.5775 are available, the approximation functions hi' can be used directly to calculate
the values of the function f at sampling points corresponding to the 3x3 integration rule.
For integration in direction perpendicular to r - s plane, that is in t coordinate it is also possible to
use Gauss integration, but due to material nonlinearity there is more advantages to use direct
rectangular integration. This concept is called the Layered model, see Fig. 3-33.
The main idea of it is to divide the element along the thickness to layers whereby in particular
layer the values of strain and stresses are expected to be constant and equal to their value at
weight point of layer. Hence the integration in t direction is computed as a sum of integrated
expressions multiplicated by adequate area of layer for all layers from bottom to top of element.
It was found that to achieve good accuracy it is necessary to about six to ten layers.
This concept. i.e. layer model is advantageous because it enables us to create for example
reinforcing layers in element and also we can use finer division near top and bottom of shell,
where higher stress level can be expected.
138
139
t k
V1 1
t u1k , N ,top t V k
t k , N ,top 2 1
u2
t k
t u3k , N ,top V3 1
t k , N ,bot
u1
tV k
,
,
t
k
N
bot
u
11
2
t k , N ,bot t
u3
V2k
1
t k
V
3 1
V1k 2
V1k 3
1
thick
2
V2k 2
V2k 3
V3k 2
V3k 3
k
1 2
k
1 3
V2k 2
V2k 3
V3k 2
V3k 3
1
thick
2
1
thick t u k , mid
t u1k ,mid
1
2
t k ,mid
t u k , mid
2
u2
0
t k , mid
u3 T1 t u3k ,mid
t k
t k
0
t
k
tk
1
thick
2
(3.90)
V2k 1
V2k 2
V2k 3
V3k 1
V3k 2
V3k 3
V1k 1
V1k 2
V1k 3
V2k 3
V2k 1
V2k 2
0
t k , N ,top
u1
t u1k , N ,top
0 t k , N ,top
t k , N ,top
u
u2
t 2k , N ,top
t k , N ,top
0 u
u3
3
T2 t k , N ,bot
t k t k , N ,bot
u1
V3 1 u1
,
,
t
k
N
bot
t k , N ,bot
u2
u
t k
t 2k , N ,bot
V3 2 t k , N ,bot
u3
u3
t k
V3 3
(3.91)
Complete transformation of the original DOFs to the new element formulation DOFs
The final transformation from the original to the new element DOFs at a node k is obtain by
substituting (3.90) into (3.91). Thus we can write
t u1k ,top
t u1k ,mid
t u1k ,mid
t k ,top
t k ,mid
t k ,mid
u2
u2
u2
t u3k ,top
t
k
mid
,
t k ,bot T2 T1 u3 T t u3k ,mid
t k
t k
u1
t
k
bot
,
u
2
t
k
tk
t k ,bot
u3
where T
140
(3.92)
2
2
2
t k
t
t
V1 1 V2k 1 V3k 1
t k t k
t k t k
t k t k
V1 1 V1 2 V2 1 V2 2 V3 1 V3 3
t k t k
t k t k
t k t k
V1 1 V1 3 V2 1 V2 3 V3 1 V3 3
2
2
2
t k
t
t
V1 1 V2k 1 V3k 1
t k t k
t k t k
t k t k
V1 1 V1 2 V2 1 V2 2 V3 1 V3 3
t
t
t
t
t k t k
V1 1 V1 3 V2k 1 V2k 3 V3k 1 V3k 3
V V V
t
k
1 2
k
2 2
k
3 2
k
1 2
k
2 2
k
3 2
V V V
t
V V V
k
1 3
k
2 3
k
3 3
V V V
k
1 3
k
2 3
k
3 3
thick k t k
V1 1
2
k
thick t k
V1 2
2
k
thick t k
V1 3
2
thick k t k
V1 1
2
k
thick t k
V1 2
2
thick k t k
V1 3
2
thick k t k
V2 1
2
k
thick t k
V2 2
2
k
thick t k
V2 3
2
thick k t k
V2 1
2
thick k t k
V2 2
2
thick k t k
V2 3
In a very similar way we can define inverse transformation, i.e. from the new DOFs to original
one. Without any derivation the matrix reads:
T11
2
T21
2
T31
where T' 2
t k
V1 1
thick k
t
V2k
1
thick k
V1k 2
thick k
t
u
u
u
t
k
t u1k ,top
t k ,top
u2
t u k ,top
T' t 3k ,bot
u1
t u k ,bot
t 2k ,bot
u3
T13
2
T23
2
T33
2
T11
2
T21
2
T31
2
V1k 3
V1k 1
V1k 2
thick k
thick k
thick k
T12
2
T22
2
T32
2
t
k , mid
1
t k , mid
2
t k , mid
3
t k
t
V2k 2
V2k 3
thick k
thick k
V2k 1
thick k
T12
2
T22
2
T32
2
t
V2k 2
thick k
(3.93)
t k
V1 3
thick k
t k
V2 3
thick k
T13
2
T23
2
T33
2
The presented
must be
work prefers to constrain t u3k ,bot but u1k ,bot or u2k ,bot are also good
candidates, if t u3k ,bot can not be fixed due some numerical problems, usually due to a special
position of the element with respect to global coordinate system.
Derivation of the constrain is now demonstrated on the case of t u3k ,bot . Using (3.92)
ATENA Theory
141
u3k ,top T16 T13 u1k ,mid T26 T23 u2k ,mid .... T56 T53 k
(3.94)
t u1k ,top ,t u2k ,top ,t u3k ,top ,t u1k ,bot ,t u2k ,bot ,t u3k ,bot , which is then used to constrain t u3k ,bot as a linear
combination of t u1k ,top ,t u2k ,top ,t u3k ,top ,t u1k ,bot ,t u2k ,bot :
u3k ,bot c1top t u1k ,top c2top t u2k ,top c3top t u3k ,top c1bot t u1k ,bot c2bot t u2k ,bot
(3.95)
where:
t
top
1
k
1 3
k
1 3
k
1 3
k
1 3
t
k
2 3
k
2 3
k
2 3
2
z
V V 1
t
t
bot
2
k
2 3
V V 1
1 V V yy
V V 1
t
bot
1
top
3
V V 1
t
c2top
k
1 3
k
2 3
V V 1
t
k
1 3
k
2 3
(3.96)
The DOFs u1k ,bot or u2k ,bot can be eliminated in the same way. During the execution of the
element, it is recommended to constrain one of
fix t u1k ,top ,t u1k ,bot ,t u2k ,bot ,t u3k ,bot . Equation (3.94) from the previous paragraph needs to be added by
three more equations. These are:
142
t u1k ,top
t k ,top
u
'
T16 t 2k ,top 0
u
T26' t 3k ,bot 0
u
T36' t 1k ,bot 0
u
t 2k ,bot
u3
(3.97)
Equations (3.94) and (3.97) are then solved for t u1k ,top ,t u1k ,bot ,t u2k ,bot ,t u3k ,bot as a linear combination
of t u2k ,top and t u3k ,top .
t u1k ,top
T11'
k ,bot
'
u1 T21
u2k ,bot
T31'
t k ,bot
top
c1
u3
T14'
T24'
T15'
T25'
T34'
T35'
T16'
T26'
T35'
c2bot
1 c1bot
(3.98)
Again, there are several alternatives regarding of which of the 6 DOFs to keep and which to
eliminate. The best option is chosen the same way as described in Section 0.
Element name
Type of
approximation
Number of
in-plane
integration
points per
axis direction
for bending
Number of
in-plane
integration
points per
axis direction
for shear
Comment
CCAhmadElement33L9
Lagrange
No
spurious
modes, locking
for this shells
CCAhmadElement32L9
Lagrange
CCAhmadElement33H9 Heterosis
CCAhmadElement32H9 Heterosis
Good
compromise
between locking
and spurious
energy modes
CCAhmadElement22S8
Fast, but
spurious modes
ATENA Theory
Serendipity
143
xi hk t X ik ak tVi nk
2
t t ( i 1)
xi hk t t X ik ,( i 1) ak t tVi nk ,(i 1)
2
t t ( i )
xi hk t t X ik ,(i ) ak t tVi nk ,(i )
2
(3.99)
where i=1,2,3 is index relating to global axes x1 , x2 , x3 , (i.e. x,y,z), k 1...nG , nG = number of
the element's nodes used to approximate geometry, typically 8 or 9. Note that due to Shell
theory the shell thickness at node k 0 ak t ak t t ak(i 1) t t ak( i ) ak . The symbol t t Vi nk ,( i ) is
ith coordinate, ( i 1, 2, 3 for coordinate x, y , z ), of the vector V n at node k at time t t ,
iteration (i ) . The vector V n is normal to the shell. Later we will use also vectors V 1 ,V 2 ,
(V 1 V 2 V n ) . They will constitute base vectors for shell's bending rotations , .
Similarly, displacements at time t t , iteration (i-1):
t t
ui(i 1) t t xi(i 1) t xi
(3.100)
t
ui(i 1) hk t t X ik ,( i 1) ak
2
Vi nk ,(i 1) t X ik ak tVi nk
2
hk t t X ik ,(i 1) t X ik ak t t Vi nk ,(i 1) t Vi nk
2
t t
(3.101)
Note that in this case k 1...n , n is number of nodes to approximate displacements. Current
implementation of the shell elements assumes ng n , (which differs for Ahmads elements).
Displacement increments within an iteration (at time t t ) are :
ui hk
t t
Vi nk ,(i ) t t Vi nk ,(i 1)
t t nk ,( i ) t t
Vi
Vi nk ,(i 1)
t
X ik ,(i ) t t X ik ,(i 1) ak
2
hk U ik ak
2
t t
(3.102)
At each node the element has 5 DOFs: 3 displacements U ik and two rotations k , k described
below:
ATENA Theory
145
Let us define at each node of the shell a local coordinate system specified by three vectors
t t 1k ,( i 1) t t 2k ,( i 1) t t nk ,( i 1)
, see Fig. 3-34. The last vector is vector normal to surface of
Vi
, Vi
, Vi
the shell at node k and the first and second vectors are calculated as follows:
t t
(3.103)
t t
For the next derivation let us assume a general vector vL v1L , v2 L , v3 L with unit length that is
subject to rotations
[ L , L , L ]T , (where the subscript L indicates that both the vector and the rotations are defined
with respect to the local coordinate system (defined by t t Vi1k ,(i 1) , t tVi 2k ,(i 1) ,
rotations of the vector will produce displacements, (all in the local CS)
u1L 0
u v
2 L 3L
u3 L v2 L
v3 L
0
v1L
v2 L L v3 L v2 L L
v1L L v3 L L v1L L
0 L v2 L L v1L L
Vi nk ,(i 1) ). The
t t
(3.104)
t t nk ,( i 1)
V2
u 2 L
t t nk ,( i 1)
V3
u3 L
t t
V12k ,( i 1)
t t 2k ,( i 1)
V2
t t 2k ,( i 1)
V3
t t
V12k ,( i 1)
t t 2k ,( i 1)
V2
t t 2k ,( i 1)
V3
t t
t t
V1nk ,(i 1) v3 L L v2 L L
t t nk ,( i 1)
V2
v3 L L v1L L
t t nk ,( i 1)
V3
v2 L L v1L L
(3.105)
Now assume the same behaviour for a vector normal to the shell's surface (again in the local CS
and unit lenght), i.e. vL t t ViLnk ,(i 1) 0, 0,1 . When this vector gets rotated, it produces
displacements, (see (3.105):
t t 1 ,( i 1)
L t t V12k ,(i 1) L
u1 V1 k
u t t V 1k ,(i 1) t t V 2k ,( i 1)
L
L
2
2
2
1
,(
i
1)
2
,(
i
1)
t
t
t
t
k
k
u3 V3
L V3
L
146
(3.106)
final equations for displacements due to rotations, (for iteration (i-1) and (i) and the difference):
t t
Vi nk ,( i 1)
t t
k ,(i 1)
t t
Vi nk ,( i )
t t
k ,( i )
t t
Vi 2k ,(i 1) t t k ,(i 1)
t t
t t k ,( i )
t t
Vi1k ,(i 1)
t t
Vi 2k ,( i 1)
t t
Vi nk ,( i ) t t Vi nk ,( i 1) t t k ,( i ) t t k ,( i 1)
k
Vi 2k ,(i 1) k
t t
Vi1k ,(i 1)
t t
Vi 2k ,( i 1) t t k ,(i ) t t k ,(i 1)
t t
Vi1k ,(i 1)
Vi1k ,(i 1)
t t
(3.107)
t t
t t
ui hk U ik ak k
2
t t
Vi1k ,(i 1) ,
Vi 2k ,(i 1) ,
t t
Vi 2k ,(i 1) k
t t
Vi1k ,(i 1)
t t
(3.108)
t t
1 t t ( i ) ( i ) t t ( i ) (i ) t t (i ) t t (i )
t ui , j
t u j ,i
t u m ,i
t um , j
2
1
( t tt ui(,i j1) t ui , j ) ( t tt u (ji,i1) t u j ,i ) ( t tt um(i,i1) t um ,i )( t tt um(i,j1) t um , j ) (3.109)
2
t t ( i 1)
t ij
t eij tij
where:
ATENA Theory
147
t t ( i 1)
t ij
t ij
1 t t (i 1) t t (i 1) t t (i 1)
t ui, j t u j ,i t uk ,i
2
t t ( i 1)
t k, j
1
t ui, j t u j ,i t tt um(i,i1) t um, j t tt um(i,j1) t um,i
2
t eij0 t eij1
1
t ui, j t u j ,i
2
1 t t ( i 1)
1
t t ( i 1)
t eij
t u m ,i t u m , j
t um , j t u m ,i
2
1
t u m ,i t u m , j
t ij
2
0
t eij
(3.110)
y
r
y
s
y
t
f
z f
x
r x
z f
f
J
s y
y
z f
f
z
t z
f
f
x
r
f J 1 f
y
s
f
f
t
z
(3.111)
(3.112)
t xi hk t k t t t k
X i ai Vni
2
r
r
t
xi hi t k t t t k
X i ai Vni
2
s
s
t xi
1
hi t ai tVnki
t
2
148
(3.113)
t t ui(i 1) hk t t k ,( i 1) t k
t
X i ak
Xi
2
r
r
t t ( i 1)
ui
h
t
k t t X ik ,( i 1) t X ik ak
2
s
s
t t ui(i 1)
1
hk ak
t
2
t t
t t
t t
Vi nk ,( i 1) t Vi nk
Vi nk ,( i 1) t Vi nk
(3.114)
Vi nk ,(i 1) t Vi nk
t t ui(i 1) hk t t k ,(i 1) t
ak
Ui
2
r
r
t t ( i 1)
ui
h
t
k t t U ik ,(i 1) ak
2
s
s
t t ui(i 1)
1
hk ak
t
2
t t
t t
t t
dVi nk ,(i 1)
dVi nk ,(i 1)
dVi nk ,(i 1)
t t
U ik ,(i 1) t t X ik ,( i 1) t X ik
t t
(3.115)
Vi
k t tVi1k ,(i 1)
U i ak
2
r
r
ui hk k t
k t t 2k ,( i 1)
Vi
k t tVi1k ,( i 1)
U i ak
2
s
s
ui
1
(3.116)
U ik t t U ik ,(i ) t tU ik ,(i 1)
ATENA Theory
(3.117)
149
t t
hk t t k ,(i 1) t
ak
Ui
2
s
1 t t nk ,( i 1)
,k
ak
dVi
t J inv
j 3 hk
,k
t J inv
j2
dVi nk ,(i 1)
t t
dVi nk ,(i 1)
hk t inv
h
J j2
t tU ik ,(i 1) k t J inv
j1
s
r
hk t inv
a h
t t dVi nk ,(i 1) k t k t J inv
J j2
j1
s
2 r
t inv
J j 3 hk
(3.118)
ak k
Gj
2
hk t inv , k hk t inv ,k
J j1
J j2
r
s
,k
t k
G j t t h kj t J inv
hk
j3
h kj
ui
, k ui
, k ui
, k ui
t J inv
t J inv
t J inv
j1
j2
j3
t
xj
r
s
t
ui
t
, k hk
k
k
t J inv
j1
U i ak
t
x
r
2
j
Vi 2k ,(i 1) k
t t
(3.119)
Vi1k ,(i 1)
t t
hk k t
k t t 2k ,( i 1)
Vi
k t tVi1k ,( i 1)
U i ak
2
s
,k
hk ak k t tVi 2k ,(i 1) k t tVi1k ,(i 1)
t J inv
j3
2
,k
t J inv
j2
150
(3.120)
ui
h
h
,k
,k
U ik k t J inv
k t J inv
j1
j2
t
xj
s
r
h
h
,k
,k t
,k
Vi 2k ,( i 1) t k t J inv
hk
k t J inv
J inv
j1
j2
j3
a
h
h
,k
,k
,k
hk
k k t tVi1k ,( i 1) t k t J inv
k t J inv
t J inv
j1
j2
j3
2
s
ak
2
t t
U ik t h kj k
t t
gi1k ,(i 1) t G kj k
t t
gi2k ,( i 1) t G kj
(3.121)
t t
gi1k ,(i 1)
t t
gi2k ,(i 1)
ak
2
ak
2
Vi 2k ,( i 1)
t t
Vi1k ,( i 1)
t t
At this place, we can derive final expression to compute linear and nonlinear strans increments.
Linear strains t eij( i ) are calculated as follows:
t h1k
0
0
B kL0 t k
h2
0
t k
h3
e (i )
t e11( i )
(i )
t e22
(i )
t e33
( i ) B1L0 B1L1
2 t e12
2 e(i )
t 23
(i )
2 t e13
t t
u1( i )
...
L0
L1
... B n B n u (ki )
...
u ( i )
n
t t
g12k ,( i 1) t G1k
h2k
0
t k
h1
0
t k
h3
0
g 22k ,( i 1) t G2k
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g3
G3
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g1
G2 t t g 22k ,(i 1)
h3k
0
h2k
t k
h1
t t
t t
t t
t t
(3.122)
(3.123)
t k
G1
t k
G2
t k
G1
where
T
The second part of B kL , i.e B kL1 , is derived from 2 t eij1 B kL1 u (ki ) , at node k:
ATENA Theory
151
1
t ij
1 t t (i 1)
t um,i t um, j t tt um(i,j1) t um,i
2
1 t t (i 1) k t k
Um hj k
t u m ,i
2
1
t tt um( i,j1) U mk t hik k
2
t t
g 1mk ,(i 1) t G kj k
t t
g m2k ,(i 1) t G kj
t t
g 1mk ,( i 1) t Gik k
t t
1 k t t (i 1) t k
U m t um,i h j k t tt um(i,i1) t t g 1mk ,(i 1) t G kj k t tt um(i,i1) t t g m2k ,(i 1) t G kj
2
1
U mk t tt um(i,j1) t hik k t tt um(i,j1) t t g 1mk ,(i 1) t Gik k t tt um(i,j1) t t g m2k ,( i 1) t Gik
2
Introducing
lmj(i 1)
t t um(i 1)
t x j
t t ( i 1)
t m, j
(3.124)
we can write
1 k (i 1) t k
U m lmi h j k 1ki,(i 1) t G kj k 2k i,(i 1) t G kj
2
1
U mk lmj(i 1) t hik k 1k j,(i 1) t Gik k 2k ,(j i 1) t Gik
2
1
t ij
B kL1 (i 1)
l11
l (i 1)
12(i 1)
l11
l11(i 1) t h1k
l12(i 1) t h2k
l21(i 1) t h1k
l22(i 1) t h2k
l31(i 1) t h1k
l32(i 1) t h2k
l13(i 1) t h3k
t k
h2 l12(i 1) t h1k
l21(i 1)
l23(i 1) t h3k
t k
h2 l22(i 1) t h1k
l33(i 1) t h3k
t k
h2 l32(i 1) t h1k
k ,( i 1) t k
13
G3
k ,( i 1) t k
k ,( i 1) t k
11
G2 12
G1
k ,( i 1) t k
23
G3
k ,( i 1) t k
k ,( i 1)
21
G2 22
k ,( i 1) t k
k ,( i 1) t k
G3 13
G2
12
k ,( i 1) t k
k ,( i 1) t k
G3 13
G1
11
k ,( i 1) t k
k ,( i 1)
G3 23
22
k ,( i 1) t k
k ,( i 1)
G3 23
21
t
t
l31(i 1)
k ,( i 1) t k
11
G1
k ,( i 1) t k
12
G2
(3.126)
The energy of nonlinear strains:
Let
152
t t
t
(3.125)
k ,( i 1) t k
21
G1
k ,( i 1) t k
22
G2
t k
G1
t k
G2
t k
G1
t t
t
( i 1)
S11
0
S12
0
0
S
13
0
0
S11
0
S11
S 22
S12
S 22
S12
S 22
S 23
S33
S13
S 23
S33
S13
S 23
SYM
S33
(3.127)
Then matrix B NL B1NL ... B kNL ... BnNL is composed so that (at a node k)
S ( i 1) B kNL u (ki )
T t t
t
(3.128)
where states for variation of the following entity. It can be shown that the matrix B NL can be
set in the following shape:
B kNL
t h1k
0
0
t k
h2
0
0
t hk
3
0
t t
h1k
t t
h1k
t t
t t
h2k
0
t t
0
t
0
t
k
3
t t
t t
t t
k
2
k
3
t t
1k ,( i 1)
3
1k ,( i 1)
1
1k ,( i 1)
2
1k ,( i 1)
3
k
2
k
3
k
3
k
3
g12k ,( i 1) t G1k
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g2
G1
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g3
G1
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g1
G2
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g2
G2
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g3
G2
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g1
G3
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g2
G3
t t 2k ,( i 1) t k
g3
G3
t t
(3.129)
Having the matrices (3.123), (3.126), (3.127) and (3.129) these are used to compute the element's
stiffness matrix, mass matrix, element loads etc. in exactly the same way as it is done for other
Atena's element.
ATENA Theory
153
plane direction, whilst layered concept is employed throughout the thickness of the shells, (i.e.
rectangur quadrature). As each layer can use different material model, some layers can be
employed for modelling of embedded reinforcement. The elements typically use 3 x 3 x
number_of_layers integration (i.e. material) points.
The elements are suitable for both shallow and deep shells and are extremely simple for use,
because they can be input and output as usual 3D solid hexahedral elements with 8, 20 or 27
nodes. Hence, these shells can be hadled with most 3D pre- and post-processors. They also use
standard 3D material models, element loads and other boundary conditions designed for
hexahedral elements.
The presented shell elements are particularly useful for structures that combine solid 3D
elements and shell elements, because they do not imply any additional shell kinematic constraint
that would harm an anjancent 3D solid elements. (Typical shell elements assume t 0 that
enforces the same displacements of the corresponding top and bottom nodes in direction of their
connecting line). They are designed for bent shells and to analyze these structures (with the same
accuracy) they require far less finite elements compared to a similar analysis using standard
hexahedral elements. On the other hand, the 3D behaviour of these elements involves a small
overhead, so that standard 2D shell elements (with only 5 stress/strain components per material
point) can perform in some cases slightly better. Nevertheless, the overhead is well paid off by
easy of use of the presented elements, their nice 3D visualization, simple connection to adjacent
3D solid parts of the structure etc. In addition, the hiearchical isoparametric space interpolation
(used for the presented 3D shell elements) ensures that finer and coarser meshes are easy to
connect. Of coarse, this feature must be supported by pre- and postprocessor being used.
ATENA Theory
155
1 t t t k ,top (i 1) 1 t
t t ( i 1)
xi hk
Xi
2
2
t
t t
(i)
1 t
xi hk
2
t t
X ik ,top (i )
X ik ,bot ( i 1)
1 t t t k ,bot (i )
Xi
(3.130)
t t
interpolation function, (see Table 3-4), k 1...nG is number of the shell's nodes, nG = number of
the element's nodes used to approximate geometry, typically 8 or 9.
xi represents
i-th
ui( i 1) t t xi( i 1) t xi
Substituting (3.130) into (3.131), i=1,2,3 for global axes x,y,z, we can derive
156
(3.131)
t t
1 t t t k ,top (i 1) 1 t t t k ,bot (i 1)
1 t t k ,top 1 t t k ,bot
ui(i 1) hk
Xi
Xi
Xi
Xi
hk
2
2
2
Xi
Xi
Xi
2
2
2
1 t
hk
2
t t
U ik ,top (i 1)
1 t
2
U ik ,bot (i 1)
t t
(3.132)
where
t t
U ik ,top (i 1) t t X ik ,top (i 1) t X ik ,
t t
U ik ,bot (i 1) t t X ik ,bot (i 1) t X ik
1 t
ui(i ) hk
2
where
t t
U ik ,top (i ) t t X ik ,top (i ) t X ik (i 1) ,
t t
U ik ,top (i )
1 t
2
t t
U ik ,bot (i )
t t
t t
and X ik ,bot is top and bottom nodal coordinate coordinate of node i. Similarly
t t
(3.133)
t t
U ik ,top ( i 1) ,
t t ( i )
t ij
1 t t (i ) t t (i ) t t (i ) t t ( i )
t ui, j t u j ,i t uk ,i t uk , j
2
1
t tt ui(,i j1) t ui(,i j) t tt u (ji,i 1) t u (ji,i) t tt uk( i,i 1) t uk( i,)i t tt uk( i,j1) t uk( i,)j
2
t tt ij(i 1) t eij(i ) tij( i )
ATENA Theory
(3.134)
157
where
t t ( i )
t i, j
is derivative of displacement
t t
beginning of time step. (i) refers to iteration number. Similarly t ui(,ij) denotes displacement
increment at the current iteration.
1 t t (i 1) t t (i 1) t t ( i 1)
t ui , j t u j , i t u k , i
2
linear and nonlinear strain increments t eij(i ) and tij(i ) :
Subtracting
t t ( i 1)
t ij
t t
t
1
t ui(,ij) t u (ji,i) t tt uk(i,i 1) t uk(i,)j t tt uk(i,j1) t uk(i,)i
2
1
t uk(i,)i t uk(i,)j
2
(i )
t ij
(i )
ij
(3.135)
f
x3 f
x1
r x1
f
x3 f
f x j f
f
J
J ij
, i.e.
s x2
ri ri x j
x j
x2
x3 f
f
t x3
x3
x2
r
x2
s
x2
t
f
f
r
x
1
f
f
f
1 f
J inv
J , i.e.
ji
s
xi
rj
x2
f
f
t
x3
(3.136)
(3.137)
1 t t k ,top 1 t t k ,bot
xi hk
Xi
Xi
2
2
(3.138)
where the interpolation functions hk (r , s ) are enlisted in Table 1-3-1 and their derivatives
with respect to to r,s,t (to calculate J) are:
158
t xi
ri
t xi hk 1 t t k ,top 1 t t k ,bot
Xi
Xi
2
r
r 2
t
xi hk 1 t t k ,top 1 t t k ,bot
Xi
Xi
2
s
s 2
t xi hk
2
t
(3.139)
X ik ,top t X ik ,bot
t t
ui(i 1) with
t t ui( i 1) hk 1 t
r
r 2
t t ui( i 1) hk 1 t
s
s 2
t t ui( i 1) hk
2
t
t t
U ik ,top ( i 1)
t t
U ik ,top ( i 1)
t t
U ik ,top ( i 1)
1 t
2
U ik ,bot ( i 1)
t t
1 t
2
U ik ,bot ( i 1)
t t
(3.140)
t t
U ik ,bot ( i 1)
r
r 2
t t ui(i ) hk 1 t
s
s 2
t t ui(i ) hk
2
t
t t
U ik ,top (i )
t t
U ik ,top (i )
t t
U ik ,top ( i )
1 t
2
1 t
2
U ik ,bot (i )
t t
U ik ,bot (i )
t t
t t
U ik ,bot (i )
(3.141)
t xj
r 2
t t
U ik ,top (i )
1 t
2
U ik ,bot (i )
t t
hk 1 t t t k ,top ( i ) 1 t t t k ,bot ( i )
Ui
Ui
2
s 2
hk t t k ,top ( i ) t t k ,bot (i )
t J inv
Ui Ui
j3
2
t J inv
j2
ATENA Theory
(3.142)
(3.143)
159
hk 1 t t inv hk 1 t t inv hk
J j2
J j3
U ik ,bot (i ) t J inv
j1
r 2
s 2
2
t t
(3.144)
where
hk 1 t t inv hk 1 t t inv hk bot t inv hk 1 t t inv hk 1 t t inv hk
hktop, j t J inv
J j2
J j3
J j2
J j3
j1
, hk , j J j1
2
2
r 2
s 2
r 2
s 2
At this place, we can derive final expression to compute linear and nonlinear strans increments.
Linear strains t eij( i ) are calculated as follows , see (3.135):
e (i )
t e11( i )
(i )
t e22
(i )
t e33
( i ) B1L0 B1L1
2 t e12
2 e(i )
t 23
(i )
2 t e13
t hktop,1
0
0
B kL0 top
t hk ,2
0
top
t hk ,3
0
t
top
k ,2
h
0
th
th
0
0
t
top
k ,1
top
k ,3
u1( i )
...
L0
L1
... B n B n u (ki )
...
u ( i )
n
top
k ,3
0
top
t hk ,2
t
hktop,1
hkbot,1
0
0
0
t
top
t hk ,2
0
top
t hk ,3
top
k ,2
h
0
top
t hk ,1
top
t hk ,3
0
0
top
t hk ,3
0
top
t hk ,2
top
h
t k ,1
(3.145)
(3.146)
where u (ki ) U1k ,top ( i ) , U 2k ,top ( i ) , U 3k ,top ( i ) , U1k ,bot ( i ) , U 2k ,bot ( i ) , U 3k ,bot ( i ) at node k.
Introducing
lij( i 1)
t t ui(i 1)
t x j
t t ( i 1)
t i, j
(3.147)
we can write
t t ( i 1)
t m ,i t
lmi(i 1) hktop, j
t t
U mk ,top ( i ) hkbot, j
t t
t t
U mk ,top (i ) hkbot,i
U mk ,top ( i ) lmi( i 1) hktop, j lmj( i 1) hktop,i t t U mk ,bot ( i ) lmi(i 1) hkbot, j lmj(i 1) hkbot,i
t t
160
U mk ,bot (i ) (3.148)
t t
l12( i 1) hktop,2
l13( i 1) hktop,3
( i 1) top (i 1) top
l11 hk ,2 l12 hk ,1
l ( i 1) htop l (i 1) htop
12( i 1) ktop,3 13(i 1) ktop,2
l11 hk ,3 l13 hk ,1
( i 1) top
l21
t hk ,1
( i 1) top
l22 hk ,2
l31( i 1) t hktop,1
l32(i 1) hktop,2
l11( i 1) t hkbot,1
l12( i 1) hkbot,2
l21(i 1) t hkbot,1
l22(i 1) hkbot,2
l23(i 1) hktop,3
( i 1) top
l21(i 1) hktop,2 l22
hk ,1
l33(i 1) hktop,3
l31(i 1) hktop,2 l32( i 1) hktop,1
l13( i 1) hkbot,3
l11(i 1) hkbot,2 l12(i 1) hkbot,1
l23(i 1) hkbot,3
( i 1) bot
l21
hk ,2 l22(i 1) hkbot,1
( i 1) top
l22(i 1) hktop,3 l23
hk ,2
( i 1) top
( i 1) top
l21 hk ,3 l23 hk ,1
( i 1) bot
l22
hk ,3 l23(i 1) hkbot,2
( i 1) bot
l21 hk ,3 l23(i 1) hkbot,1
l33(i 1) hkbot,3
( i 1) bot
( i 1) bot
l31 hk ,2 l32 hk ,1
l32(i 1) hkbot,3 l33( i 1) hkbot,2
(3.149)
Assembling stresses at time t t , iteration (i-1) into matrix
t t
t
S (i 1) , participation of nonlinear
t t
t
Sij(i 1) tij(i )
t t
t
Sij(i 1) tij(i )
(i )
(i )
(i )
t u k , j t u k ,i t u k , j
t t
t
1
t tt Sij(i 1) t uk(i,)i
2
t tt Sij( i 1) t uk(i,)i t uk(i,)j
T
u1(i )
u1(i )
...
...
T t t ( i 1)
NL
NL
B u (ki )
u (ki ) B
tS
...
...
u ( i )
u (i )
n
n
B NL B1NL
ATENA Theory
NL
k
... B kNL
t hktop,1
0
0
top
t hk ,2
0
0
htop
t k ,3
0
... B nNL
0
t
top
k ,1
hkbot,1
h
0
0
top
t hk ,1
hktop,2
hktop,2
0
0
bot
t hk ,3
0
0
top
k ,3
(3.150)
0
t
top
k ,3
0
0
t
0
t
hkbot,2
0
0
bot
k ,1
h
0
0
hkbot,2
0
0
bot
k ,3
0
bot
t hk ,1
0
0
bot
t hk ,2
0
0
bot
t hk ,3
(3.151)
161
t t
t
S (i 1)
t tt s11( i 1)
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t s12
0
0
t t s ( i 1)
t 13
0
t t ( i 1)
t 11
symmetric
t t ( i 1)
t 11
0
t t ( i 1)
t s12
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t 22
s
0
t t ( i 1)
t 22
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t s13
t t ( i 1)
t 12
0
t t ( i 1)
t s23
0
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t s23
t t ( i 1)
t 22
s
0
0
t t ( i 1)
t 33
s
0
t t ( i 1)
t 33
t t ( i 1)
t 13
t t ( i 1)
t 23
s
0
0
s
0
(3.152)
t t ( i 1)
t s33
Using (3.136) and (3.137) it follows to present final expression for computation of space
derivatives of f ( x1 , x2 , x3 ) :
h k
f
;
F
J inv
ji
k rj
xi
h k h k (r , s, t ) h k (r , s ) h k (t )
k
h k
h
inv
h k h k
J ji Fk
rj
r
j
k
k
k
h k k
h k k
h k k
inv
k h
inv
k h
inv
k h
J
F
h
h
J
F
h
h
J1i Fk
h h
2i
3i
k s
k t
r
t
r
k
k
k
h
h
h
k
k
k
inv
inv
J1inv
i
Fk r h J 2i k F s h J 3i Fk h t
(3.153)
f
k
(
,
)
(t )
J inv
F
h
r
s
h
ji k
xi
rj
Having all the matrices and relationships above, the rest of derivation of the presented
isoparametric shell elements is straightforward. Simply use the matrices B L0 , B L1 , B NL and
t t ( i 1)
( i 1)
tS
to calculate structural stiffness matrices t K L , t tt K NL
, vectors of nodal forces
t t
162
ATENA Theory
163
164
a2
b2
Geom etry
Vt
t
a3
b3
6
t
a1
Vs
s
b1
13
5
16
14
7
18
19
15
17
Bric k nodes
20
Beam 3D nodes
7
10
10
3 11
1
12
11
9
2
1
3
Beam 1D nodes
14
12
15
w
13
x
y
u
Global c oord. system and elem ent dofs
ATENA Theory
165
x hi t X i t ai tVi tx t bi tVi sx
2
2
t
s
t
s
t
y hi t Yi t ai tVi y t bi tVi y
2
2
(3.154)
t
s
z hi t Z i t ai tVi tz t bi tVi sz
2
2
In the above i refers to axial nodes, i.e. i 1..3 for the nodes 13,14,15, see the 1D beam nodes.
hi hi (r ) is i-th nodal interpolation function i described in Section 3.2.
T
t X i ,t Yi ,t Z i
are
t
s
global coordinates of a node i at time t. The vectors t Vi tx ,t Vi y ,t Vi tz , t Vi sx ,t Vi y ,t Vi sz are the
vectors t Vt , tVs depicted in Fig. 3-38, in a cross section i, at time t, which define local
coordinate axis s,t. The symbols t ai , t bi refers to dimensions of the cross section i, time t; see
the figure, too.
Geometry of the beam at time t dt is defined in a similar way:
t
s
x hi t dt X i t ai t dtVi tx t bi t dtVi sx
2
2
t
s
t
s
t dt
y hi t dt Yi t ai t dtVi y t bi t dtVi y
2
2
t
s
t dt
z hi t dt Z i t ai t dtVi tz t bi t dtVi sz
2
2
t dt
(3.155)
u t dt x t x
t dt
v t dt y t y
t dt
w t dt z t z
(3.156)
u hi U i t ai Vi tx t bi Vi sx
2
2
t
s
t
s
v hi Vi t ai Vi y t bi Vi y
2
2
(3.157)
t
s
w hi Wi t ai Vi t z t bi Vi sz
2
2
In the above equation the vectors Vi t , Vi s are Vi t t dt Vi t t Vi t and Vi s t dt Vi s t Vi s and they are
approximated by
166
Vi tx
t
Vi y
Vi tz
Vi sx
s
Vi y
Vi sz
t dt
t dt
Vi tz ix
t dt
Vi t x iz
t dt
Vi y ix
t dt
t dt
t dt
t dt
Vi y iz
Vi tz iy
Vi t x iy
Vi y iz
Vi sz ix
Vi sz iy
t dt
Vi sx iz
t dt
Vi y ix
t dt
t dt
Vi sx iy
(3.158)
The parameters ix , iy , iz are rotations around the global axis, with respect to beginning of the
current load step. Note that (3.158) is valid only approximately.
dy
dr
dy
ds
dy
dt
dz
dr
dz
ds
dz
dt
df
df
dr
dr
df J 1 df
ds
ds
df
df
dt
dt
(3.159)
167
X i ai Vi bi Vi
r
r
2
2
t
y hi t
t t t ty s t t sy
J12
Yi ai Vi bi Vi
r
r
2
2
J11
t z hi t
t t t tz s t t sz
Z i ai Vi bi Vi
r
r
2
2
t
x
1
hi t bi tVi sx
J 21
s
2
J13
t y
1
s
hi t bi tVi y
s
2
t
y
1
J 23
hi t bi tVi sz
t
2
J 22
J 31
t x
1
hi t ai tVi tx
t
2
J 32
t y
1
t
hi t ai tVi y
t
2
t z
1
hi t ai tVi tz
J 33
t
2
168
(3.160)
The matrix
t dt
t
BNL . :
u
x
u
y
u
z
v
x
v
y
v
z
w
x
w
y
w
z
U 1
V
1
W1
x
1
1y
z
1
U
2
V2
W
t dt
2
B
t NL
2x
y
2
2z
U 3
V
3
W3
x
3y
3
z
3
t dt
t
BNL U
(3.161)
The detailed expressions for calculating t dtt BNL are given in (3.164) and (3.165). The equations
are important because they present the way, how spatial derivatives of all the displacements are
calculated. The entries in t dtt BNL are thus used to setup also the matrix t dtt BL 0 and t dtt BL1 .
These matrices are computed as follows:
ATENA Theory
t dt
t
BL 0(1,i )
t dt
t
t dt
t
BL 0(2,i )
t dt
t
BNL (5,i )
t dt
t
BL 0(3,i )
t dt
t
BNL (9,i )
t dt
t
BL 0(4,i )
t dt
t
t dt
t
BL 0(5,i )
t dt
t
t dt
t
BL 0(6,i )
t dt
t
BNL (1,i )
(3.162)
169
t dt u t dt
t dt v t dt
t dt w t dt
B
B
+
+
t NL (1,i )
t NL (4,i )
t BNL (7,i )
x
x
x
t dt u t dt
t dt v t dt
t dt w t dt
B
B
+
+
t NL (2,i )
t NL (5,i )
t BNL (8,i )
y
y
y
t dt
t
BL1(1,i )
t dt
t
BL1(2,i )
t dt
t
BL1(3,i )
t dt
t
BL1(4,i )
t dt u t dt
t dt v t dt
t dt w t dt
B
B
+
+
t NL (6,i )
t BNL (9 i )
t NL (3,i )
z
z
z
t dt u t dt
t dt u t dt
t dt v t dt
B
B
+
t NL (2,i )
t NL (1,i )
t BNL (5,i ) +
x
y
x
t dt v
y
t dt
t
BL1(5,i )
t dt u
y
t dt v
z
t dt
t
170
BL1(6,i )
t dt
t
BNL (4,i ) +
t dt
t
t dt
t
t dt w t dt
t dt w t dt
B
+
t NL (8,i )
t BNL (7,i )
x
y
t dt u
BNL (3,i )
z
t dt
t
t dt v
BNL (2,i ) +
y
t dt
t
BNL (6,i ) +
t dt w t dt
t dt w t dt
BNL (5,i ) +
z t BNL (8,i )
t BNL (9,i ) +
y
y
t dt u t dt
t dt u t dt
t dt v t dt
t BNL (1,i )
t BNL (3,i ) +
t BNL (4,i ) +
z
x
z
t dt v t dt
t dt w t dt
t dt w t dt
B
B
+
+
t NL (6,i )
t NL (7,i )
t BNL (9,i )
x
z
x
(3.163)
t dt
t
1
BNL (1,1) J1,1
t dt
t
BNL (1,2) 0
t dt
t
BNL (1,3) 0
t dt
t
BNL (1,4) 0
hi
r
hi t t t dt tz s t t dt sz 1 1 t t dt sz 1 1 hi t t dt tz
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J1,2 hi bi Vi J1,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
t t t dt t y s t t dt s y 1 1 t t dt s y 1 1 hi t t dt t y
t dt
1 hi
ai Vi
t BNL (1,6) J1,1
ai Vi bi Vi J1,2 hi bi Vi J1,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
1 hi
t dt
t BNL (2,1) J 2,1
r
t dt
B
0
t NL (2,2)
t dt
t
1
BNL (1,5) J1,1
t dt
t
BNL (2,3) 0
t dt
t
BNL (2,4) 0
hi t t t dt t z s t t dt sz 1 1 t t dt sz 1 1 hi t t dt tz
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J 2,2 hi bi Vi J 2,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
t t t dt t y s t t dt s y 1 1 t t dt s y 1 1 hi t t dt t y
t dt
1 hi
ai Vi
t BNL (2,6) J 2,1
ai Vi bi Vi J 2,2 hi bi Vi J 2,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
1 hi
t dt
t BNL (3,1) J 3,1
r
t dt
t BNL (3,2) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (2,5) J 2,1
t dt
t
BNL (3,3) 0
t dt
t
BNL (3,4) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (3,5) J 3,1
t dt
t
BNL (3,6)
t dt
t
BNL (4,1) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (4,2) J1,1
t dt
t
BNL (4,3) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (4,4) J1,1
t dt
t
BNL (4,5) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (4,6) J1,1
t dt
t
BNL (5,1) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (5,2) J 2,1
t dt
t
BNL (5,3) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (5,4) J 2,1
t dt
t
BNL (5,5) 0
t dt
t
ATENA Theory
BNL (5,6)
hi t t t dt tz s t t dt sz 1 1 t t dt sz 1 1 hi t t dt tz
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J 3,2 hi bi Vi J 3,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
t t t dt t y s t t dt s y 1 1 t t dt s y 1 1 hi t t dt t y
1 hi
J 3,1
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J 3,2 hi bi Vi J 3,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
hi
r
hi
r
t t t dt tz s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sz 1 1 hi t t dt tz
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J1,2 hi bi Vi J1,3
r
2
2
2
2
hi
r
t t t dt tx s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sx 1 1 hi t t dt tx
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J1,2 hi bi Vi J1,3
r
2
2
2
2
hi
r
hi t t t dt tz s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sz 1 1 hi t t dt tz
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J 2,2 hi bi Vi J 2,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
1 hi
J1,1
r
t t t dt tx s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sx 1 1 hi t t dt t x
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J1,2 hi bi Vi J1,3
r
2
2
2
2
(3.164)
171
172
t dt
t
BNL (6,1) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (6,2) J 3,1
t dt
t
BNL (6,3) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (6,4) J 3,1
t dt
t
BNL (6,5) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (6,6) J 3,1
t dt
t
BNL (7,1) 0
t dt
t
BNL (7,2) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (7,3) J1,1
t dt
t
BNL (7,4)
t dt
t
BNL (7,5)
t dt
t
BNL (7,6) 0
t dt
t
BNL (8,1) 0
t dt
t
BNL (8,2) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (8,3) J1,1
t dt
t
BNL (8,4)
t dt
t
BNL (8,5)
t dt
t
BNL (8,6) 0
t dt
t
BNL (9,1) 0
t dt
t
BNL (9,2) 0
t dt
t
1
BNL (9,3) J 3,1
t dt
t
BNL (9,4)
t dt
t
BNL (9,5)
t dt
t
BNL (9,6) 0
hi
r
hi t t t dt tz s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sz 1 1 hi t t dt tz
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J 3,2 hi bi Vi J 3,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
hi
r
t t t dt tx s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sx 1 1 hi t t dt tx
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J 3,2 hi bi Vi J 3,3
r
2
2
2
2
hi
r
s t t dt s y 1 1 t t dt s y 1 1 hi t t dt t y
1 hi t t t dt t y
J1,1
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J1,2 hi bi Vi J1,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
t t t dt tx s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sx 1 1 hi t t dt tx
1 hi
J1,1
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J1,2 hi bi Vi J1,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
hi
r
1 hi
J 2,1
r
t t t dt t y s t t dt s y 1 1 t t dt s y 1 1 hi t t dt t y
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J 2,2 hi bi Vi J 2,3
r
2
2
2
2
t t t dt tx s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sx 1 1 hi t t dt tx
1 hi
ai Vi
J 2,1
ai Vi bi Vi J 2,2 hi bi Vi J 2,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
hi
r
s t t dt s y 1 1 t t dt s y 1 1 hi t t dt t y
1 hi t t t dt t y
ai Vi
J 3,1
ai Vi bi Vi J 3,2 hi bi Vi J 3,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
t t t dt tx s t t dt sx 1 1 t t dt sx 1 1 hi t t dt tx
1 hi
J 3,1
ai Vi
ai Vi bi Vi J 3,2 hi bi Vi J 3,3
r 2
r
2
2
2
(3.165)
t t
t
t tt xx
t t
t Sij
t t
t xy
t t
t yy
t t
t xz
t t
t yz
t t
t zz
xx
t t
t
t t
t xy
t t
t yy
t t
t xz
t t
t yz
t t
t zz
xx
t t
t
sym.
t t
t xy
t t
t yy
(3.166)
t t
t xz
t t
t yz
t t
t zz
As already mentioned, stress-strain relations are calculated in r,s,t coordinate system, hence we
need equations for their transformations from global x,y,z coordinate system to the isoparametric
system with r,s,t coordinates and vice versa.
Let us denote t dt T , t dtT transformation matrices for strain and stress transformation from
global to isoparametric coordinate system, so that:
t tt xx
t t
t t
t yy
t rr
t t
t t t dt t zz
t t
t rs
t xy
t tt rt
t t
t tt yz
t xz
(3.167)
t tt rr
t t t dt
t rs T
t tt rt
xx
yy
zz
xy
yz
xz
t t
t
t t
t
t t
t
t t
t
t t
t
t t
t
t dt V rx 2
t dt
T t dt V rx t dtV sx
t dt V rx t dtV tx
t dt
t dt
t dt
ry
ry t dt
sy
t dt
ry t dt
ty
t dt
V
V
t dt
V rz
V rz
V
2t dt V rx
t dt
V sz
rz t dt
sz
t dt
V rx
t dt
t dt
t dt
V y t dt V
rx t dt
ty
t dt
ry
2t dt V
ry t dt
V sx
ry t dt
tx
t dt
t dt
ry t dt
ry t dt
t dt
sy
rz t dt
ty
V sz t dt V rz
ry t dt
V
tz
t dt
t dt rx t dt s z
V
V t dt V rz t dtV sx
rz t dt t x
t dt rx t dt t z
t dt
V
V V
V
2t dt V rx
V rz
V
V
t dt
V rz
(3.168)
ATENA Theory
173
t dt V rx 2
t dt
T 2t dt V rx t dtV sx
2t dt V rx t dtV tx
t dt
ry
2t dt V
ry t dt
sy
t dt
ry t dt
ty
V
V
t dt
V rz
2t dt V rz
t dt
t dt
t dt
t dt
V sz
rz t dt
V rx
t dt
sz
V rx
t dt
ry
t dt
V y t dt V
rx t dt
ty
t dt
t dt
ry t dt
V sx
ry t dt
tx
t dt
t dt
ry t dt
ry t dt
t dt
sy
rz t dt
ty
V sz t dt V rz
ry t dt
V
tz
t dt
t dt rx t dt sz
V
V t dt V rz t dtV sx
rz t dt t x
t dt rx t dt t z
t dt
V
V V
V
t dt
V rz
V
V rx
t dt
V rz
(3.169)
s
t
V s t dt V sx t dt V y t dt V sz , t dt V t t dt V tx t dt V y t dt V tz are vectors
of unity length from Fig. 3-38. The remaining vector is calculated as a vector product of the
previous two vectors:
where vectors
t dt
t dt
V r t dt V rx
t dt
ry
t dt
V rz t dt V s t dtV t
(3.170)
T1 t dt TT
(3.171)
t dt
t dt
Number of
integ. points
174
Integrat
ion
point
Coordinate r
Weight
0.577350269189626
1.
-0.577350269189626
1.
0.774596669241483
0.555555555555556
0.
0.888888888888889
-0.774596669241483
0.555555555555556
0.861136311594053
0.347854845137454
0.339981043584856
0.652145154862546
-0.339981043584856
0.652145154862546
0.861136311594053
0.347854845137454
0.906179845938664
0.236926885056189
0.538469310105683
0.478628670499366
0.
0.568888888888889
-0.538469310105683
0.478628670499366
-0.906179845938664
0.236926885056189
0.932469514203152
0.171324492379170
0.661209386466265
0.360761573048139
0.238619186083197
0.467913934572691
-0.238619186083197
0.467913934572691
-0.661209386466265
0.360761573048139
-0.932469514203152
0.171324492379170
Although the 2-nodes integration may be sufficient, (with respect to the quadratic displacement
transformation), a higher order integration scheme will yield better result in a case of high
material nonlinearity and/or in a case of a very curved beam geometry.
As for integration within the cross-section, i.e. in s,t coordinates, trapezoidal quadrature is used.
The element cross-section is subdivided into ns , nt strips as depicted in the following figure.
t
dtnt
2
ds1
ds2
dsns
2
dt2
dt1
ind ividual weight
and m aterial
The integration is then carried out by summing functional values in centre of the all
quadrilaterals multiplied by their area.
Note that the element is integrated within the isoparametric coordinate system, hence we have to
use dx dy dz det( J ) dr ds dt , see (3.159).
Nice feature of the ATENAs implementation of the beam is that each of the quadrilaterals in a
cross section adopts an artificial input weight factor. By default, such a weight is equal to one,
however, if we set its value to zero, essentially a hole is introduced. This mechanism, together
with possibility of defining an customized material law in each of the quadrilaterals facilitates to
analyse beams that have a arbitrary shape of cross-sections.
The present beam implementation supports also smeared reinforcement. This is done in the same
way as it was for the Ahmad elements described in the previous section.
ATENA Theory
175
Geometry
t
Vt
13
15
18
19
17
10
3 11
1
12
11
9
12
1
3
w
z
Beam 3D nodes
5
7
10
9
20
Brick nodes
5
16
14
7
Vs
y
x
v
y
u
Global coord. system and element dofs
r
Isoparametric shape
Shape of cross section can be any quadrilateral, i.e. it need not be only a rectangle as depicted
above. The elements are particularly useful for analyses of structures, where beam elements must
be combined with 3D solid and/or shell elements.
176
Derivation of the element is much the same as that for CCIsoShell element, i.e. Equations
(3.131) and (3.133) thru (3.153) remain valid. Geometry and displacement approximation
(3.132) is replaced by:
1 s t k , front 1 s t k ,back 1 t t k ,top 1 t t k ,bot
xi hk
Xi
Xi
Xi
Xi
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
t
t t
(i)
1 ds
xi hk
2
t t
X ik , front (i )
1 s
2
t t
1 t
X ik ,back (i )
2
t t
X ik ,top (i )
1 t
2
t t
t t
X ik ,bot (i 1) (3.172)
X ik ,bot (i )
ATENA Theory
177
Beam 1D nodes
w
z
2
2
r
y
Isoparametric shape
3D
2D
YG
YL
178
ZG
N2
YG
N1
N1
XL
YL
YG
XG
XG
XL
N2
Fig. 3-42 Local and global coordinate systems for truss element N1-N2, (e.g. loaded element edge)
Specification of a boundary load deserves slightly more attention. Firstly, it is applied only to an
elements edge or an elements surface, (see also the note below), as opposed to e.g. an element
body load that is for the whole element. Local coordinate system is thus defined by location of
the loaded edge or surface. Secondly, a boundary load definition must include a reference to a
selection, which contains nodes to be loaded. Their order in the list is irrelevant, as what really
matters is the order in which they appear in the element incidences. When processing a boundary
load, ATENA loops thru all elements surfaces and edges, (in the order specified in the table
below) and checks appropriate incidental nodes. If the tested node is present in the list of loaded
boundary nodes, it is picked up and put into incidences of a new planar or line element. This
element is later used to process the boundary load. It is its local coordinate system, that is
(possibly) used to deal with local/global load transformations.
The table below defines the orders, in which element surfaces and edges are tested for a surface
or edge element load. (It is assumed that element incidences are ( n1 , n2 , ... nnum _ elem _ nodes ) ). It
describes linear elements but surfaces and edges of nonlinear elements are treated in the same
order.
Table 3-7: Order of element surface and nodes as they are tested within a boundary load definition.
Element shape
Type
Surface/node incidences
Truss
Edge
(n1 , n2 )
Triangle
Surface
(n1 , n2 , n3 )
Edge
Surface
(n1 , n2 , n3 , n4 )
Edge
Surface
Quad
Hexahedron,
(brick)
(n1 , n2 , n6 , n5 ); (n4 , n3 , n7 , n8 );
Edge
Tetrahedron
Surface
Edge
ATENA Theory
179
Wedge
Surface
(n1 , n2 , n3 ); (n4 , n5 , n6 );
(n1 , n2 , n5 , n4 ); (n6 , n5 , n2 , n3 ); ( n4 , n6 , n3 , n1 )
Edge
Note that only one surface or one edge of each element can be loaded in a single boundary load
specification. If more elements surfaces or edges are to be loaded, use more boundary load
definitions. Violation of this rule causes an error report and skipping of the offending boundary
load.
3D edge load
planar element
2D edge load
planar element
ZG
n1
n1
XL
ZL
XL
YG
YL
n2
n2
YL
n3
n3
YG
XG
XG
3D edge load
solid element
3D surface load
solid element
n1 X L Z L
ZG
ZG
YL
n3
n2
XG
180
n5
ZL
XL
n2
n6
YG
XG
n5
n1
YL
n3
n6
YG
Fig. 3-43 Examples of positioning local coordinate system used by surface and element load for 2D
and 3D elements
Transport analysis does not distinguish between local and global element loads. Hence, a local
element load is treated as being a global load. The actual load value is always scalar, (unlike
vectors in statics) and it is assumed positive for flow out of the element.
3.21 References
AHMAD, S., B. M. IRONS, ET AL. (1970). "Analysis of Thick and Thin Shell Structures by
Curved Finite Elements." International Journal of Numerical Methods in Engineering 2:
419-451.
BATHE, K.J.(1982), Finite Element Procedures In Engineering Analysis,
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey 07632, ISBN 0-13-317305-4.
Prentice-Hall, Inc.,
CRISFIELD, M.A. (1983) - An Arc-Length Method Including Line Search and Accelerations,
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering, Vol.19,pp.1269-1289.
FELIPPA, C. (1966) - Refined Finite Element Analysis of Linear and Nonlinear TwoDimensional Structures, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Engineering, pp.41-50.
HINTON, E. AND D. R. J. OWEN (1984). Finite Element Software for Plates and Shells,
Peridge Press.
JENDELE, L. (1981). Thick Plate Finite Element based on Mindlin's Theory. Prague, student
research work.
JENDELE, L. (1992). Nonlinear Analysis of 2D and Shell Reinforced Concrete Structures
Including Creep and Shrinkage. Civil Engineering Department. Glasgow, University of
Glasgow: 393.
JENDELE, L., A. H. C. CHAN, ET AL. (1992). "On the Rank Deficiency of Ahmad's Shell
Element." Engineering Computations 9(6): 635-648.
RAMM, E. (1981) - Strategies for Tracing Non- linear Responses Near Limit Points, Non- linear
Finite Element Analysis in Structural Mechanics, (Eds. W.Wunderlich, E.Stein, K.J.Bathe)
ATENA Theory
181
(4.1)
where A, x , b stands for a global structural matrix and vectors of unknown variables and rhs of
the problem, respectively. Hence, this problem is discussed first.
a11
a
21
a31
A
a51
a12
a13
a15
a22
a23
a24
a25
a32
a42
a33
a43
a34
a44
a35
a45
a46
a52
a53
a54
a64
a55
a65
a56
a66
a76
a67
a77
(4.2)
is thus stored in three vectors d , u , l with actual data and one vector p with information about
matrixs profile:
d a11
a22
a33
a44
a55
a66
a77
u a12
a13
a23
a13
a24
a34
a15
a25
a35
a45
a46
a56
a67
a13
a43
a43
a51
a52
a53
a54
a64
a65
a76
T
T
(4.3)
p 0 1 3 5 9 11 12
For each column i of the matrix A the vector p stores location of ai (i 1) within the array u ,
resp. l . If A is symmetric, then u l and only l is stored. Note the a direct solver we have to
ATENA Theory
183
store all elements within the bandwidth, even though some of them may be equal to zero,
because that they can become non-zero in the process of solution, (i.e. matrix factorization).
Iterative solver can store only true non-zero elements, irrespective of whether they are located
above or below the skyline. Suppose the matrix A from (4.2) that stores some zero elements
below the skyline
a11
0
a31
A
a51
a13
a22
a23
a24
a32
a42
a33
a43
a34
a44
0
0
a46
0
a64
a55
a65
0
a66
a15
a76
a67
a77
(4.4)
All iterative solvers would store the matrix A in three vectors. All the data are stored in a vector
a and location of the stored element is maintained in vectors r , c . The above matrix is stored as
follows:
a a11 a31 a51 a22 a32 a42 a33 a13 a23 a43 ... a77 a67
c 1 3 5
r 1
3 4
3 1 2
7
3 ... 7 6
21
(4.5)
23
The vector a stores for each column of A first diagonal element, followed by all non-zero
elements, from the top to the bottom of the column. The vector c stores row index of each entry
in the vector a . r stores location of all diagonal elements aii within a appended by an artificial
pointer to an 1n 1 , where n dim( A) .
A LDU
(4.6)
where L, U is lower and upper matrix and D is diagonal matrix. The method to compute the
decomposition is described elsewhere, e.g. (Bathe 1982). Equation (4.1) is then solved in two
steps:
v L1b
x DU v
1
(4.7)
Both of the above equations are computed easily, because the involved matrices have triangular
pattern. Hence, the solution of (4.7) represents back substitution only. If A is symmetric, (which
is usually the case), then
184
U LT
(4.8)
185
important for the case of preconditioned iterative solvers. This is where a preconditioning matrix
is created.
The most efficient preconditioning routine are based on incomplete Cholesky decomposition
(Rektorys 1995). The preconditioning matrix A' is decomposed in the same way as (4.6), i.e.
A' L'D'U'
(4.9)
for aij 0
a 'ij aij
for aij 0
a 'ij aij
(4.10)
The incomplete Cholesky decomposition is carried out in the same way as complete Cholesky
decomposition (4.6), however, entries in A , which were originally zero and became nonzero
during the factorization are ignored, i.e. they stay zero even after the factorization. The incurred
inaccuracy is the penalty for memory savings due to usage of the iterative solvers storage
scheme. For symmetric problem, use ssics routine, for nonsymmetric problems the ssilus is
available to construct A' L'D'(L')T or A' L'D'U' .
Last, but not the least note that each solver needs some temporary memory. Such requirements
are included in the table below. Typically, the more advanced iterative solver, the more extra
memory it needs and the less number of iterations needed to achieve the same accuracy.
Table 4.1-1 SOLVER TYPES.
Type
D/I
Prep.
phase
Exec.
phase
Sym/N Temporary
required
onsym
LU
---
---
S,NS
-----
JAC
ssds
sir
S,NS
4*(11)+8*(1+4*n)
Simple,
recommended
GS
---
sir
S,NS
4*(11+nel+n+1)+8*(1+3
*n+nel)
ILUR
ssilus
sir
S,NS
4*(13+4*n+nu+nl)+8*(1
+4*n+nu+nl)
DCG
ssds
scg
4*(11)+8*(1+5*n)
ICCG
ssics
scg
4*(12+nel+n)+8*(1+5*n
+nel)
DCGN
ssd2s
scgn
S,NS
4*(11)+8*(1+8*n)
For
large
nonsymmetric
wellposed problems
LUCN
ssilus
scgn
S,NS
4*(13+4*n+nl+nl)+8*(1
+8*n+nl+nu)
For
large
nonsymmetric problems,
recommended
186
memory Description
not
DBCG
ssds
sbcg
S,NS
4*(11)+8*(1+8*n)
LUBC
ssilus
sbcg
S,NS
4*(13+4*n+nl+nu)+8*(1
+8*n+nu+nl)
DCGS
ssds
scgs
S,NS
4*(11)+8*(1+8*n)
LUCS
ssilus
scgs
S,NS
4*(13+4*n+nl+nu)+8*(1
+8*n+nu+nl)
DOMN
ssds
somn
S,NS
4*(11)+8*(1+4*n+nsave
+3*n*(nsave+1))
LUOM
ssilus
somn
S,NS
4*(13+4*n+nu+nl)+8*(1
+nl+nu+4*n+nsave+3*n
*(nsave+1))
DGMR
ssds
sgmres
S,NS
4*(31)+8*(2+n+n*(nsav
e+6)+nsave*(nsave+3))
LUGM
ssilus
sgmres
S,NS
4*(33+4*n+nl+nu)+8*(2
+n+nu+nl+n*(nsave+6)+
nsave*(nsave+3))
In the above:
n is number of degree of freedom of the problem. nel is the number of nonzeros in the lower
triangle of the problem matrix (including the diagonal). nl and nu is the number of nonzeros in
the lower resp. upper triangle of the matrix (excluding the diagonal).
Table 4.1-2: EXECUTION PHASES.
Phase name
Description
sir
scg
scgn
sbcg
scgs
somn
ATENA Theory
187
sgmres
Preconditioned GMRES iterative sparse Ax=b solver. This routine uses the
generalized minimum residual (GMRES) method with preconditioning to
solve non-symmetric linear systems of the form: A*x = b.
Phase name
Description
ssds
ssilus
ssics
ssd2s
As for the solution procedure, i.e. the latter of the two solution phases, the most commonly used
method is Conjugate gradient method (with incomplete Cholesky preconditioner) (Rektorys
1995). The flow of execution is as follows:
188
r 1 b A x1
z 1 M 1 r 1
r i zi
i 1 i 1
r z
i
p i z i i p i 1
r i zi
i
p Ap i
i
(4.11)
x i 1 x i i p i
r i 1 r i i Ap i
z i 1 M 1 r i 1
i i 1
This solution procedure is implemented in scg routine.
The iterative solvers in ATENA are based on SLAP package (Seager and Greenbaum 1988) that
where modified to fit into ATENA framework. The authors of the package refer to (Hageman
and Young 1981), where all of the implemented solution techniques are fully described.
Symmetric Matrices:
The solver first computes a symmetric fill-in reducing permutation P based on either the
minimum degree algorithm (Liu, 1985) or the nested dissection algorithm from the METIS
package (Karypis, 1998) (both included with Intel MKL), followed by the parallel left-right
looking numerical Cholesky factorization (Schenk, 2000) of PAPT = LLT for symmetric
ATENA Theory
189
positive-definite matrices, or PAPT = LDLT for symmetric indefinite matrices. The solver uses
diagonal pivoting, or 1x1 and 2x2 Bunch and Kaufman pivoting for symmetric indefinite
matrices, and an approximation of X is found by forward and backward substitution and iterative
refinements.
Whenever numerically acceptable 1x1 and 2x2 pivots cannot be found within the diagonal supernode block, the coefficient matrix is perturbed. One or two passes of iterative refinements may
be required to correct the effect of the perturbations. This restricting notion of pivoting with
iterative refinements is effective for highly indefinite symmetric systems. Furthermore, for a
large set of matrices from different applications areas, this method is as accurate as a direct
factorization method that uses complete sparse pivoting techniques(Schenk, 2004).
Another method of improving the pivoting accuracy is to use symmetric weighted matching
algorithms. These algorithms identify large entries in the coefficient matrix A that, if permuted
close to the diagonal, permit the factorization process to identify more acceptable pivots and
proceed with fewer pivot perturbations. These algorithms are based on maximum weighted
matchings and improve the quality of the factor in a complementary way to the alternative idea
of using more complete pivoting techniques.
The inertia is also computed for real symmetric indefinite matrices.
Unsymmetric Matrices:
The solver first computes a non-symmetric permutation PMPS and scaling matrices Dr and Dc
with the aim of placing large entries on the diagonal to enhance reliability of the numerical
factorization process (Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.. In the next step the solver
computes a fill-in reducing permutation P based on the matrix PMPSA + (PMPSA)T followed by
the parallel numerical factorization
QLUR = PPMPSDrADcP
with supernode pivoting matrices Q and R. When the factorization algorithm reaches a point
where it cannot factor the supernodes with this pivoting strategy, it uses a pivoting perturbation
strategy similar to (Error! Hyperlink reference not valid.. The magnitude of the potential pivot
is tested against a constant threshold of alpha = eps*||A2||inf , where eps is the machine
precision, A2 = P*PMPS*Dr*A*Dc*P, and ||A2||inf is the infinity norm of the scaled and
permuted matrix A. Any tiny pivots encountered during elimination are set to the sign
(lII)*eps*||A2||inf, which trades off some numerical stability for the ability to keep pivots from
getting too small. Although many failures could render the factorization well-defined but
essentially useless, in practice the diagonal elements are rarely modified for a large class of
matrices. The result of this pivoting approach is that the factorization is, in general, not exact and
iterative refinement may be needed.
Direct-Iterative Preconditioning.
The solver enables to use a combination of direct and iterative methods (Error! Hyperlink
reference not valid.) to accelerate the linear solution process for transient simulation. Most of
applications of sparse solvers require solutions of systems with gradually changing values of the
nonzero coefficient matrix, but the same identical sparsity pattern. In these applications, the
analysis phase of the solvers has to be performed only once and the numerical factorizations are
the important time-consuming steps during the simulation. PARDISO uses a numerical
factorization A = LU for the first system and applies the factors L and U for the next steps in a
preconditioned Krylow-Subspace iteration. If the iteration does not converge, the solver
automatically switches back to the numerical factorization. This method can be applied to unsymmetric and structurally symmetric matrices in PARDISO. For symmetric matrices
190
Conjugate-Gradients method is applied. You can select the method using only one input
parameter.
(4.12)
where:
q is the vector of total applied joint loads,
f ( p ) is the vector of internal joint forces,
p is the deformation increment due to loading increment,
p are the deformations of structure prior to load increment,
K ( p ) is the stiffness matrix, relating loading increments to deformation increments.
The R.H.S. of (4.12) represents out-of-balance forces during a load increment, i.e. the total load
level after applying the loading increment minus internal forces at the end of the previous load
step. Generally, the stiffness matrix is deformation dependent, i.e. a function of p , but this is
usually neglected within a load increment in order to preserve linearity. In this case the stiffness
matrix is calculated based on the value of p pertaining to the level prior to the load increment.
The set of equations (4.12) is nonlinear because of the non-linear properties of the internal
forces:
f (kp ) kf ( p )
ATENA Theory
(4.13)
191
(4.14)
K ( pi 1 ) pi q f ( pi 1 )
(4.15)
All the quantities for the (i-1)-th iteration have already been calculated during previous solution
steps. Now we solve for p i at load level q using:
pi pi 1 pi
(4.16)
As pointed out earlier, equation(4.15) is nonlinear and therefore it is necessary to iterate until
some convergence criterion is satisfied. The following possibilities are supported in ATENA
( k marks k -th component of the specified vector):
piT pi
piT pi
rel . disp
( q f ( pi 1 ))T ( q f ( pi 1 ))
f ( pi )T f ( pi )
rel . force
(4.17)
piT ( q f ( pi 1 ))
piT f ( pi )
rel .energy
abs . force
The first one checks the norm of deformation changes during the last iteration whereas the
second one checks the norm of the out-of-balance forces. The third one checks out-of-balance
energy and the fourth conditions checks out-of-balanced forces in terms of maximum
components (rather then Euclid norms). The values of the convergence limits are set by
default to 0.01 or can be changed by input command SET.
The concept of solution nonlinear equation set by Full Newton-Raphson method is depicted in
Fig. 4-1:
192
Loading
Loading increment
Deformation
K ( pi 1 ) K ( p0 )
The modified Newton-Raphson method is shown in Fig. 4-2. Comparing Fig. 4-1 and Fig. 4-2 it
is apparent that the Modified Newton-Raphson method converges more slowly than the original
Full Newton-Raphson method. On the other hand a single iteration costs less computing time,
because it is necessary to assemble and eliminate the stiffness matrix only once. In practice a
careful balance of the two methods is usually adopted in order to produce the best performance
for a particular case. Usually, it is recommended to start a solution with the original NewtonRaphson method and later, i.e. near extreme points, switch to the modified procedure to avoid
divergence.
Loading
q
Loading increment
p0
p1
p2
p3
p4
Deformation
ATENA Theory
193
(4.19)
K ( pi 1 ) pi q f ( pi 1 ) q f i 1
(4.20)
pi pi 1 pi pi 1 i 1 i 1
(4.21)
pi pi 1 i 1 i 1
(4.22)
i i 1 i 1
(4.23)
The notation is explained in Fig. 4-3. The matrix K can be recomputed for every iteration
(similar to Full Newton-Raphson method) or it can be fixed based on the 1st iteration for all
subsequent iterations (Modified Newton Raphson method). The vector q does not mean in this
case the total loading at the end of the step but only a reference loading "type". The actual
loading level is a multiple of this.
194
The scalar is an additional variable introduced by the Line-search method, which will be
discussed later. The scalar is used to accelerate solutions in cases of well-behaved loaddeformation relationships or to damp possible oscillations, if some convergence problems arose,
e.g. near bifurcation and extreme points.
q 0
0 q
q 1
q 2
q 3
1 q
g0
Loading
R2
Load increment
R1
T 0
0
q start
p
00
p 2
p 3
11
p1
p0
2 2
p2
Deformation
(4.24)
(4.25)
Substituting (4.21) through (4.25) into (4.20), the deformation increment i 1 can be calculated
from:
K i 1 RHS i 1 i 1q gi 1
(4.26)
i 1 i 1 i 1 T
(4.27)
Hence:
where
i 1 K 1 gi 1
(4.28)
T K q
1
It remains only to set the additional constraint for i 1 and i 1 and the whole algorithm is
defined. Thus compared to the Newton-Raphson methods in which we solve n dimensional nonlinear problem, the Arc-length method need to solve a (n + 2) dimensional problem, where the
first n unknowns correspond to deformations and the last two are i 1 and i 1 .
ATENA Theory
195
If we set i 1 1 , then we deal with an (n + 1) dimensional problem that correspond to pure Arclength method, otherwise a combination of Arc-length and Line search must be employed. The
Line search method is discussed later in this chapter. Note that all vectors including i 1 , T are
of order (n + 1). Their (n + 1)-th coordinate corresponds to the loading dimension and it is set
to zero.
Now, introduce two new vectors ti 1 and ni 1 as shown in Fig. 4-4. There are defined by:
ti 1 pi 1 ( i 1 start )
(4.29)
ni 1 i 1 i 1
(4.30)
where:
start is a (n+1) dimensional vector similar to i 1 , however its (n + 1)-th coordinate equal
to start .
n1
t1
n2
t2
n3
t3
(4.31)
Ri 1 ti 1 ni 1
(4.32)
equations (4.20) through (4.32) lead to the final expression for the unknown i 1 (noting that
piT1 i 1 piT1 i 1 0 ):
196
i 1
Ri 1 piT1 i 1
(4.33)
piT1 T 2 (i 1 start )
To obtain i 1 by (4.33) the residual Ri 1 must be defined. In fact, it also define type of Arclength constrain being used. The types supported in ATENA are described below.
n1
t1
t2
n2
n3
t3
The main advantage of this method is its simplicity. The Normal update plane is relatively
reliable, but it can fail if the l-p diagram suddenly changes its slope or turns back or down (snap
back and snap through). Nevertheless if these special conditions are treated by this method then a
very significant reduction in step length is unavoidable.
Ri 1 ti T1 ni 1 ti 1
ni 1 cos( ) ti 1 ( ti 1 s )
The step length s and angle are depicted in Fig. 4.3-4. The norm of the vector
(4.34)
ti 1 is
ATENA Theory
piT1pi 1 2 ( i 1 start ) 2
(4.35)
197
ti-1
i-1
s
required
s
current
s = step length
ti
Substituting (4.34) and (4.35) in (4.33) we obtain the final expression for i 1 . It should be
noted that the scalar s is set 'a priori' and governs the actual step length. Of course, the proper
choice of this parameter is essential for the solution and therefore it will be discussed later in
more detail.
This method is especially suitable for solutions that embrace p diagrams with sudden breaks
and discontinuities, e.g. for materially nonlinear problems.
ni 1 cos( ) ti 1
Ri 1 ti T1 ni 1 ti 1
ri 1
(4.36)
Based on the similar triangles (see Fig. 4.4-), the following can be derived:
rl 1
t 'l 1 s
Ri 1
tl 1
(4.37)
t 'l
s 2 ( ti ' s )
(4.38)
ti '
ti ' ti 1 ni'1
ti '
ti ' 1 2 i21 2 i 1
(4.39)
2
(4.40)
The vector ti ' 1 is calculated using (4.35). By substituting the above equations into (4.33) final
expression for i 1 is obtained.
From the above derivation it is clear that in practice we at first employ Normal Update Method
(Chapter 4.4.1) to solve for ti ' and ni'1 and thereafter we correct the i 1 in order to satisfy
the constraint ti 1 ti s .
198
||ri-1||
ni-1
||ti-1||
ni-1
ti
s
||ti||
s = step length
p
(4.41)
where:
a1 2 TT T 2
a2 2 2 ( i 1 start ) 2 TT i 1 2
(4.42)
a3 2 ( i 1 start ) 2 2 i T1 i 1 s 2
Equation (4.41) has generally two roots i 1 and hence we must decide which of them to use.
There exist several strategies but ATENA chooses that root i 1 , for which cos( ti 1 , ti ) 0 (or
higher of them), i.e. direction of new increment as close as possible to direction of the previous
increment (within the same step).
ATENA Theory
199
si
si
si
ni 1
si 1
n
(4.43)
ni 1
si 1
n
(4.44)
n
si 1
ni 1
(4.45)
where
si and si 1 is Arc length step length in the current and the previous load increment,
respectively.
n and ni 1 is desired number of iterations and number of iterations in the previous step.
n is typically 5-6.
( p ) ( p0 ) g ( p )T dp minimum
po
Hence:
200
(4.46)
( p )
d
p
p
p
T
g ( p )T
0
p g ( p)
p 0
(4.47)
|| p0 ' p0 ||
'
(4.48)
and using :
p p0
p
(4.49)
'
g ( p0 )T
g ( p0 )T g ( p0 ' )T
(4.50)
g ( p0
g ( p0 )
Practical experience suggests that the value of parameter should be kept in interval < 0.1 5>.
4.6 Parameter
The parameter scales the deformation space p to the loading dimension . If 0 , the
solution for i 1 is searched on an area of a cylindrical shape of radius equal to step length
s (Crisfield method) and the axis normal to the p (deformation) space. The solution is the point
of intersection of this area and the line, defined by the energy gradients of structure and by the
applied load at point p . If 0 , the solution is carried out in the same way on ellipsoidal or
spherical space.
The higher value of , the higher "weight factor" for changes in loading space compared to
displacement increments.
ATENA currently supports the following formulae for setting and optimization of (for current
step j ). They are reviewed below.
ATENA Theory
201
The first strategy requires the load to displacement increment ratio (4.51) is constant
throughout all steps, (e.g. input value req )
( p )
req
(4.51)
j 1
j 1
(4.52)
( j 1 p )
This value (due to nonlinearities) will not match req . Therefore, for step j we will modify j
as follows:
req
req
j 1
j 1
(4.53)
j 1
j 1
req
j 1
j 1
( j 1 p )
req
req
j 1
j 1 j 1
( j 1 p )
The above optimisation process is initialized in the first step by assuming that
, where T is displacement corresponding to master Arc-length
0 1, 0 1, ( j 1 p ) T
load increment defined earlier in this chapter. Hence
1
req
j 1
req
req
req T
1
j 1 j 1
( j 1 p)
(4.54)
The parameters j in all subsequent steps are calculated using (4.53). If ratio of displacements
changes ( j p ) to load changes ( j ) in the last load step increase, then the equation (4.54)
(4.55) increases in the current step, thereby puts higher weight factor on loads compared to
displacements. Hence, the equation (4.54) tends to keep constant importance of loading space
irrespective of displacements. Note that the equation (4.54) corresponds to
BETA_FORCES_DISPLS_RATIO_CONSTANT.
The second supported strategy is different. In ATENA it is referred to as
BETA_RATIO_CONSTANT method and it tries to keep constant coefficients, whilst
managing the coefficients . Thus, it works in opposite way as compared to the first strategy
described above.
From (4.52) we can write for steps (j-1) and j
202
j 1
Now requiring
j 1
( j 1 p )
j 1
j 1
( j p)
j
j we have
j
( j p)
j 1
( j 1 p)
j 1
( j 1 p)
j
j 1
(4.56)
j 1
( j p)
j
and if we assume
j 1
( j 1 p )
, then
( j p)
j 1
( j 1 p)
j
j 1
j 1
(4.57)
( j p)
j
( j 1 p )
If
j 1
( j p)
in subsequent steps changes, the procedure is trying to compensate for that by re-
j
adjusting the coefficients . In other words, this strategy is trying to keep
( p)
constant, (i.e.
203
If the structural nodes are numbered as indicated, then the beam 1,2 and 3 has nodal incidences
1-3, 3-4 and 4-2, respectively and the final stiffness matrix K has the pattern from the leftbottom part of Fig. 4-5. Note that the matrix K must store also the entries depicted as circles
without filling. Although they are initially zero, they may turn non-zero during the matrix
decomposition needed to solve the problem, i.e. we must store the matrix with 69 entries and
maximum half-band width 9.
On the other hand, if nodal degrees of freedom are numbered as shown in the right-bottom part
of Fig. 4-5, then the matrix K must store only 51 entries and has maximum half bandwidth only
6.
The two examples document, how important efficient numbering of the degrees of freedom of
the structure is. If the structure (to be solved) is simple, then a suitable dofs' numbering can be
done manually by appropriate numbering of the structural nodes. However, in the more complex
cases (and in particular if a model of the structure is generated automatically), an optimal dofs
mapping must be calculated.
There are number of algorithms that deliver more or less efficient dofs mapping. Probably the
best established algorithm of that kind is Cuthill-McKee algorithm (Cuthill, McKee 1969). This
is not due to its superior property, but due it has been developed as first. The algorithm produces
an ordered n-tuple R of vertices which is the new order of the structural vertices. It numbers the
vertices according to a particular breadth-first traversal, where neighboring vertices are visited in
order from lowest to highest vertex order.
The reverse CuthillMcKee algorithm (RCM) is the alternative of the Cuthill-McKee algorithm,
in which the vertices are visited in reverse order, i.e. form the highest to the lowest vertex.
ATENA implements Gibbs and Sloan dofs optimization algorithms:
204
205
4.8 References
BATHE, K.J.(1982), Finite Element Procedures In Engineering Analysis,
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey 07632, ISBN 0-13-317305-4.
Prentice-Hall, Inc.,
CRISFIELD, M.A. (1983) - An Arc-Length Method Including Line Search and Accelerations,
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering, Vol.19, pp.1269-1289.
CUTHILL, E. and J. MCKEE (1969). Reducing the Bandwidth of Sparse Symmetric Matrices.
Proc. 24th Nat. Conf. ACM.
DAVIS, T., AMESTOY, P., DUFF, I.S (1995) - An Aproximate Minimum Degree Ordering
Algorithm, Comp. and Information Science Dept., University of Florida, Tech. Report
TR-94-039.
DUFF, I. S. and KOSTER, J. (1999) - The Design and Use of Algorithms for Permuting Large
Entries to the Diagonal of Sparse Matrices. SIAM J. Matrix Analysis and Applications,
20(4):889-901.
FELIPPA, C. (1966) - Refined Finite Element Analysis of Linear and
Nonlinear
Two-Dimensional Structures, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Engineering,
pp.41-50.
GIBBS, N. E., W. G. POOLE, et al. (1976). "An Algorithm for Reducing the Bandwidth and
Prole of a Sparse Matrix." SIAM Journal of Numerical Analysis 13(2).
KARYPIS, G. and KUMAR, V. (1998) - A Fast and High Quality Multilevel Scheme for
Partitioning Irregular Graphs. SIAM Journal on Scientific Computing, 20(1):359-392.
LIU, J.W.H. (1985) - Modification of the Minimum-Degree Algorithm by Multiple Elimination.
ACM Transactions on Mathematical Software, 11(2):141-153.
LI, X.S., DEMMEL, J, W. (1999) - A Scalable Sparse Direct Solver Using Static Pivoting. In
Proceeding of the 9th SIAM conference on Parallel Processing for Scientific Computing, San
Antonio, Texas, March 22-34.
206
RAMM, E. (1981) - Strategies for Tracing Non- linear Responses Near Limit Points, Non- linear
Finite Element Analysis in Structural Mechanics, (Eds. W.Wunderlich,E.Stein, K.J.Bathe)
REKTORYS, K. (1995). Pehled uit matematiky. Prague, Prometheus.
SLOAN, S. W. and M. F. RANDOLF (1983). "Automatic Element Reordening for Finite
Element Analysis with Frontal Solution Schemes." Int. Journal for Numerical Methods in Eng.
19: 1153-1181.
SEAGER, M. K. and A. GREENBAUM (1988). A SLAP for the Masses, Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory
SCHENK, O., GARTNER, K. and FICHTNER, W. (2000) - Efficient Sparse LU Factorization
with Left-right Looking Strategy on Shared Memory Multiprocessors. BIT, 40(1):158-176.
SCHENK, O. and GARTNER, K. (2004) - On Fast Factorization Pivoting Methods for Sparse
Symmetric Indefinite Systems. Technical Report, Department of Computer Science, University
of Basel, submitted.
SONNEVELD, P. (1989) - CGS, a Fast Lanczos-Type Solver for Nonsymmetric Linear
Systems. SIAM Journal on Scientific and Statistical Computing, 10:36-52.
VONDRACEK, R. (2006) - The Use Of The Sparse Direct Solver In The Egineering
Applications Of The Finite Element Method. Theses for Ph.D. Czech Technical University,
Prague.
ATENA Theory
207
Level 1: Reinforced concrete beams, frames and slabs with span under 20m and heights of up to
30m, plain concrete footings, retaining walls.
Level 2. Prestressed beams or slabs of spans up to 20m, high-rise building frames up to 100m
high.
Level 3. Medium-span box girder, cable-stayed or arch bridges with spans of up to 80m,
ordinary tanks, silos, pavements.
Level 4. Long-span prestressed box-girder, cable-stayed or arched bridges; large bridges built
sequentially in stages by joining parts, large gravity, arch or buttress dams, cooling towers, large
roof shells, very tall buildings.
Level 5. Record span bridges, nuclear containments and vessels, large offshore structures, large
cooling towers, record-span thin roof shells, record-span slender arch bridges.
Full creep and shrinkage analysis is mandatory for design of structures level 4 and 5 and it is
recommended also for the level 3 structures.
209
nonlinearity becomes significant and a more elaborate solution has to be employed. The above
simplification applies to time dependent (i.e. long term) material behaviour only. For short-term
behaviour of the material model retains its nonlinearity, i.e. it accounts for phenomena such as
cracks, plasticity.
The creep and shrinkage analysis is based on assumption of Stieltjes integral, which is is written
for the case of 1D analysis in the following form:
t
(t ) (t , t ')
t'
d 0 (t )
(4.58)
where:
t = observation time,
t ' = loading time,
(t ) =stress at time t ,
0 (t ) = initial stress-independent strain such as concrete shrinkage,
(t , t ') = compliance function of concrete.
Fig. 5-1 Decomposition of stress history into stress steps (left) or impulses (right).
d .
current material state at time t and stress increment at time t t , i.e.
(t ) (t , ) B( ( ))
t'
B( ( ))
( ) d 0 (t )
(4.59)
where:
(t ) = is stress vector at time t , (note the bar atop of a symbol indicates vector),
0 (t ) = vector of initial strains, such as shrinkage,
B( ( )) = matrix accounting for multiaxial stress-strain conditions, including all material
short-term nonlinearities.
210
Notice the way the equation (4.59) is written. Long-term and short-term material behaviour is
separated. The former is encapsulated in compliance function (t , t ') , whereas the short-term
behaviour is comprised in the matrix B( ( )) . This assumption brings significant simplification
of the creep and shrinkage analysis and it is believed that for most practical analysis the induced
inaccuracy is acceptable.
Substituting t t ' t , t 0 into (4.59) and applying load increment (t ') (t ') (i.e.
loading from zero level) at time t ' , it can be derived
(4.60)
Comparison of (4.60) with similar equations for constitutive relations for short-term loading
conditions, i.e. t ' t t ' , yields instantaneous secant material rigidity matrix:
(4.61)
The matrix D(t ') corresponds to reciprocal value of the well known secant Young modulus
E (t ') in the case of 1D stress-strain conditions. In the case of plane stress conditions, the matrix
B( ( )) reads (4.62), etc.
B=
1
sym.
0
2(1 )
0
(4.62)
n
1
1
'(t , t ')
1 e
E (t ') 1 E (t ')
(4.63)
where :
ATENA Theory
211
Fig. 5-2 Approximation of compliance (or retardation) function curve at age t at loading by a sum of
exponentials used as shape functions of Dirichlet series
The effect of use of Dirichlet series approximation is depicted in the above figure. A single
approximation exponential is drawn in sub-figure (a), while the whole process of decomposition
of compliance and retardation curves is depicted in the sub-figures (b), (c), respectively.
The incorporation of Dirichlet series '(t , t ') brings the following benefits:
-
Less demand of computer storage needed for storing data from the previous temporal
steps of the analysis. It suffices to store data from the previous analysis step only, rather
than the complete stresses-strain history of the analyzed structure.
(4.64)
(tr ) r r 1 r
(4.65)
(tr ) r r 1 r
(4.66)
1
r 1/2
E
1
Er 1/2
E ,r 1/ 2
1 , r
t
r
r 1 e
212
tr
(4.67)
(4.68)
t
i
r 1 e *r 1 r0
1
(4.69)
(tr ) r r 1 r
(4.70)
e
*
t r
r 1/2
E
r
r
Er 1/2
r 1
(4.71)
1
E (tr ) E (tr 1 ) = constant average secant Young modulus at time incremenent
2
tr ,
1
1
E (tr ) E (tr 1 ) Er Er 1
2
2
coefficient E at tr ,
E r 1/2
B r 1/2
1
B(tr ) B(tr 1 ) = average value of the matrix B at tr .
2
Equation (4.64) thru (4.71) defines all necessary relations to complete the creep and shrinkage
analysis in ATENA. Of course, they are supplemented by relations used by short-term material
constitutive model, i.e. equations for calculating the matrix B.
At each time increment, a typical short-term alike analysis is carried. Difference between the
short-term analysis and the described analysis of one step of the creep and shrinkage is that the
r 1/2 and initial strain increments r to
latter one uses especially adjusted Young modulus E
account for creep and shrinkage. After each step these have to be updated. It involves mainly
r 1/2 is calculated and the next temporal
update of and r . With these values a new E
r
213
(4.63) and Fig. 5-2, whilst the choice of integration times affects accuracy of the approximation
of loading function of the structure, see Equation (4.58) and Fig. 5-1. If number of the times is
too low, some important features of concrete behaviour can be disregarded. The opposite extrem,
i.e. using too many of retardation or integration times results in worthless lengthy solution of the
problem.
The ATENA software respects recommendation in (Bazant and Whittman 1982). Retardation
times are spread uniformly in log(t ) space and they are automatically calculated as follows:
10
1
m
1 ,
1, 2..n
(4.72)
In the above m is number of retardation times per log(t ) unit, m 1 . By default this constant is
in ATENA set to 1. If required, a more detailed approximation is possible, i.e. any value m 1
can be used. In the program this parameter is input as a number of retardation times per time unit
in logarithmic scale. For a typical concrete creep law a certain optimal value can be determined
and it is independent of a structure being analyzed. Note however, that the value depends on the
choice of time units.
Example: If the retardation times parameter is set to 2, the creep law will be approximated by
two approximation points for the time interval between 0 - 1 day, two points for the interval 1 10 days, then two points for 10 - 100 days, etc.
Therefore, the proper values will depend on the choice of time units. If the time unit is a day, the
recommended value is 1 - 2.
Start time 1 must be chosen sufficiently low, so that Dirichlet series can account for processes
in very young concrete, right after its loading has been applied. As a default, ATENA uses the
expression 1 0.1 t ' .
As for the upper limit for , it is required:
t
2
(4.73)
The above limits are applicable for the case, when the coefficients E (t ') of Dirichlet series in
(4.63) are calculated by Least-square method (Jendele and Phillips 1992).
ATENA also supports alternative way of calculation of the coefficients E (t ') of Dirichlet series
in (4.63). In this case, Inverse Laplace transformation (Bazant and Xi 1995) is used instead. This
method requires 1 0 , typically 1E-3 and
n t
(4.74)
Comparing the above two approaches, it can be said that Least-square method yields
approximation of the compliance function at discrete times, whereby Inverse transformation is
based on continuous approach. In some cases Least-square method results in better convergence
behaviour, however it sometimes suffers from numerical problems during calculation due to illposed problem for solution of E (t ') . It is left to experience and engineering judgment to decide,
which of the method is more appropriate for a particular solution.
214
Integration times or sample times tr are calculated in similar way. In this case, the times are
uniformly spread in log(t t ') time scale. They are generated starting from the 1st loading time
t ' . Hence , we can write
tr 10
r 1
l
t1 t '
(4.75)
where l 2 is number of time increments per unit of log(t t ') and t1 t ' 0.1 days. Each new
major load increment or decrement causes the generation procedure (4.75) must start again from
small time increments. This parameter defines the number of time steps, the program will use to
integrate the structural behavior. Creep or other nonlinear effects will cause a redistribution of
stresses inside the structure. In order to properly capture such processes a sufficiently small time
steps are needed. Its definition depends on the type of the analyzed structure as well as on the
choice of time units. For typical reinforced concrete structures and for the time unit being a day,
it is recommended to set this parameter to 2. This will mean that for each load interval longer
then 1 day, two sub-steps will be added. For a load that is interval longer then 10 days, 4 substeps will be added. For an interval longer than 100 days, it will be 6 sub-steps, etc.
The creep and shrinkage analysis in ATENA requires that the user set number of retardation
times m and number of time increments l per unit of log time, (unless the default values are
OK). He/she also specifies time span, i.e. 1 and n . Then, retardation times are generated, i.e.
an appropriate command is issued. It follows to set stop time of the analysis. Usual input data
describing structural shape, material etc. are given thereafter, however, there are three important
differences from time-independent analysis:
1. Materialmodelforconcretecontainsdataforlongtermaswellasforshorttermmaterial
model.
2. Stepdatamustincludeinformationabouttime,atwhichthestepisapplied.
3. Itisrecommendedtoinputdataforallintendedloadtimestepspriorthestepsareexecuted.It
helpsthegenerationofintegration(intermediate)times
Intermediate time steps, i.e. times tr as well retardation times are generated automatically. The
analysis proceeds until the stop time is reached. If no stop time is specified, it is assumed to be
time of the last load step. If the time span for retardation times does not covered step load times,
the solution is aborted, giving an appropriate error message.
ATENA Theory
215
Generally speaking, ATENA applies no restriction on kind and shape of both (t , t ') and r0 , as
it adopts SBS method solution algorithm, in which compliance function is approximated by
Dirichlet series. Hence, most widely recognized creep prediction models could be implemented.
The CCStructureCreep module currently supports the following models:
1. CCModelACI78 (ACI_Committee_209 1978), recommended by ACI, by now already
obsolete,
2. CCModelCEB_FIP78 (Beton 1984), recommended by CEB committee, by now already
obsolete,
3. CCModelB3 (Bazant and Baweja 1999), developed by Bazant and Al Manaseer in 1996,
very efficient model recognized world-wide,
4. CCModelB3Improved, same as the above, improved to account for temperature history,
probably the best model available in ATENA,
5. CCModelCSN731202, model developed by CSN 731202 Code of practice in Czech
Republic,
6. CCModelBP1_DATA (Bazant and Panula 1978; Bazant and Panula 1978; Bazant and
Panula 1978; Bazant and Panula 1978), relatively efficient and complex model; now it is
superceeded by CCModelBP_KX or CCModelB3,
7. CCModelBP2_DATA (Bazant and Panula 1978), simplified version of the above model,
8. CCModelBP_KX (Bazant and Kim 1991; Bazant and Kim 1991; Bazant and Kim 1991;
Bazant and Kim 1991), powerful model with accounts for humidity and temperature
history etc., for practical use it may-be too advanced,
9. CCModelGeneral general model into which experimentally obtained (t , t ') and r0
function can be input.
10. CCModelEN1992- Eurocode model for creep, (EN1992),
11. CCModelFIB_MC2010- creep model based on CEB-FIP FIB Model Code 2010.
The following data summarized input parameters for the supported models. Note that some
models allow improved prediction based on laboratory data. If it is the case, the model input the
corresponding experimentally measured values. Also, some model can account for material point
history of humidity h(t ) and temperature T (t ) . Again, a model supports this feature, if it can
input adequate data.
Table 5.5-1 : List of material parameters for creep and shrinkage prediction definition and
description
216
Parameter name
Description
Concrete. type
Units
Default
1
Thickness S / V
length
0.0767m
Strength f cyl 28
stress
35.1MPa
stress
Constant
from the
base
material
stress
Constant
from the
base
material
Strength f t 28
stress
Constant
from the
base
material
Young m. E28
stress
F ( f cyl 28 )
Ambient humid. h
0.78
Ratio ac
7.04
Ratio wc
0.63
Ratio as
2.8
Ratio sa
0.4
Ratio g s
1.3
Ratio sc
1.8
Shape factor
1.25
Slump
length
0.012m
Air content
ATENA Theory
217
Cement mass
Concr. density
Curing type
Thermal expansion
coefficient T
mass/
320kg/
length3
m3
mass/
2125kg/
length3
m3
AIR
1/temp
erature
Constant
from he
base
material
End of curing
days
a ,
t ts
I/D
days
30
ts
days
ha ,
0.8
kg
N/A
Current time t
Load time t
Tot.water loss w
218
Shrink. 0 (t )
kg
N/A
N/A
Compl. (t , t ')
N/A
Humidity h(t )
N/A
Temperat. T (t )
Compl. (t , t ')
Direct
Hist.
Improvem.
Shrink. 0 (t )
Strength f cyl (t )
ATENA Theory
Celsia
1/
stress
N/A
219
220
Table 5.5-2: Input parameters needed by individual creep and shrinkage prediction models
Model name
B3
B3impr
BPKX
CEB
ACI
CSN
BP1
BP2
Gen
eral
Model No.
Concrete. Type
Thickness S / V
Strength f cyl 28
Strength ft 28
Young m. E28
Ambient humid. h
Ratio ac
Ratio wc
Ratio sa
Ratio g s
Ratio sc
Ratio as
Shape factor
Slump
Air content
Cement mass
Concr. density
Curing type
End of curing
Thermal expansion
coefficient T
a ,
ATENA Theory
221
I/D
ts
ha ,
Current time t
Load time t
Shrink. 0 (t )
Compl. (t , t ')
Humidity h(t )
Temperat. T (t )
Direct
Hist.
Improvem.
Tot.water loss w
Compl. (t , t ')
Shrink. 0 (t )
Strength f cyl (t )
The above parameter Concrete type actually referes to a cement type according to the ACI
classification. It used in the creep analysis. The following table brings description of widely
recognized cement types. Note that only types 1,3 are supported in Atena static analysis. The
transport analysis in Atena recognizes types 1-4. The remaining types are described just for
information.
Table 5.5-3: Cement types according to ACI classification
ATENA
Concrete
type
Cement type
Description
I and Type IA 3
Air-entraining cements
222
IV
IS (X) 4
IP (X)4
Portland-pozzolan cement.
GU 5
General use
HE5
10
MS5
11
HS5
12
MH5
13
LH5
5.6 References
ACI_COMMITTEE_209 (1978). Prediction of Creep, Shrinkage and Temperature Effects in
Concrete Structures. Detroit, 2nd draft, ACI.
BATHE, K. J. (1982). Finite Element Procedures in Engineering Analysis. Englewood Cliffs,
New Jersey 07632, Prentice Hall, Inc.
BAZANT, Z. AND T. SPENCER (1973). "Dirichlet Series Creep Function for Aging Concrete."
ASCE Journal of Engineering and Mechanical Division: 367-387.
BAZANT, Z. P. (1988). Mathematical Modeling of Creep and Shrinkage of Concrete. New
York, John Wiley & Sons.
BAZANT, Z. P. AND S. BAWEJA, EDS. (1999). Creep and Shrinkage Predicition Model for
Analysis and design of Concrete Structures: Model B3. Creep and Shrinkage of Concrete,
ACI Special Publicatino.
Blended hydraulic cements produced by intimately and uniformly intergrinding or blending two or more types of
fine materials. The primary materials are portland cement, ground granulated blast furnace slag, fly ash, silica fume,
calcined clay, other pozzolans, hydrated lime, and pre-blended combinations of these materials. The letter X
stands for the percentage of supplementary cementitious material included in the blended cement. Type IS(X), can
include up to 95% ground granulated blast-furnace slag. Type IP(X) can include up to 40% pozzolans.
All portland and blended cements are hydraulic cements. "Hydraulic cement" is merely a broader term. ASTM C
1157, Performance Specification for Hydraulic Cements, is a performance specification that includes portland
cement, modified portland cement, and blended cements. ASTM C 1157 recognizes six types of hydraulic cements.
ATENA Theory
223
224
6 DURABILITY ANALYSIS6
The durability analysis in ATENA can currently assess deterioration of structures due to
carbonation and chlorides ingress. It is available for static and creep analyses. At each time step
an appropriate 1D transport analysis is carried out to investigate, how far the pollution, (i.e.
carbonation and/or chlorides) penetrate from loaded surfaces inside the structure. Main results
of the analyses are induction times, i.e. times at which the pollution concentration reaches
values that are already for the structure unacceptable, (e.g. the reinforcement corrosion begins
etc.). They are always given with respect to time t0 0 . In addition, pollution concentration at
times (corresponding to the individual steps) are also computed.
Note that static analysis in ATENA typically doesn't care about time, (or more precisely each
analysis step increments the structural age by unit time). At each step it yields sort of artificial
age of the structure. Hence, if the durability analysis is carried out, this artificial age must be
somehow mapped onto real structural age. It is done in ATENA with help of a multilinear
function. Such a function corresponds to loading functions used to define variable BCs and it is
input in exactly the same way.
The following text describes theory behind the 1D transport analysis of the carbonation and
chlorides pollution and at the end some information regarding the transport parameters is given.
Service life of a structure tl has usually the form of
tl tc ti t p tr
(4.76)
where tc is the construction phase, ti initiation period, tp propagation period and tr post-repair
period.
We aim at predicting the initiation period, without going into propagation or post-repair phases.
Carbonation and chloride ingress are two leading mechanisms contributing to reinforcement
corrosion. Both of them are described further. The initiation phase ends with the beginning of
reinforcement corrosion. Fig. 6-1 brings more detailed description of initiation and propagation
phases and their relationship to concrete events. Prediction of initiation period represents a
preventive measure which is affected above all by concrete cover thickness, concrete
composition, and environment. It makes sense to change design in the beginning rather than
mitigating reinforcement corrosion later. Acceleration of carbonation and chloride ingress on
crack appearance is taken into account.
ATENA Theory
225
6.1 Carbonation
Carbonation depth of a sound (uncracked) concrete reads (Papadakis and Tsimas 2002)
xc
2 De ,CO 2CO2
0.218(C kP)
t A1 t
(4.77)
where xc is the carbonation depth, De,CO2 is the effective diffusivity for CO2, C is the Portland
cement content in kgm-3, k<0.3,1.0> is the efficiency factor of supplementary cementitious
material (SCM-slag, silica, fly ash), P is the amount of SCM in kgm-3, CO2 is the volume
fraction of CO2 in the atmosphere taken as 3.6e-4 and t is the time of exposure. The effective
diffusivity in m2s-1 is given by the empirical equation (Papadakis and Tsimas 2002)
3
De ,CO 2
(W 0.267 C kP ) /1000)
(1 RH ) 2.2
6.1106
C
kP
W
c
1000
(4.78)
where W is the water content in concrete in kgm-3, c is the cement density in kgm-3 assumed as
3150 kgm-3 and RH is the relative humidity of ambient air. Eqs. (4.77)(4.78) allow predicting
either carbonation depth or induction time of uncracked concrete.
Cracked concrete leads to faster carbonation. This acceleration is given in the form (Kwon and
Na 2011)
xc (t ) (2.816 w 1) A1 t
(4.79)
where w is the crack width in mm, A1 is the carbonation velocity according to Eq.(4.77).
Eq. (4.79) allows computing carbonation depth or induction time. Note that crack 0.3 mm
increases carbonation depth by a factor of 2.54. This also means that induction time is 6.46 times
shorter compared to a sound concrete.
226
In reality, crack may grow during any service time. Thus, Eq. (4.79) needs to be recast to
incremental form. An increment of carbonation depth in a given time step t is evaluated from
the total derivative by differentiating Eq. (4.79)
xc t
2.816
wi 1 1 A1
2 ti 0.5
2.816 A1 t
w
2 wi 0.5
(4.80)
where wi+1 is the crack width at the end of the time step, ti+0.5 is the mid-time. It is assumed that
nonzero w at a frozen time t has no effect on carbonation depth, thus the term w can be left
out. Eq. (4.80) allows predicting either carbonation depth or induction time of gradually cracking
concrete.
246
157
0.1
69.9
44.5
0.2
49.2
31.4
0.3
39.1
24.9
Table 6.1-1. Induction time for carbonation, two concretes, cover thickness 30 mm.
6.2 Chlorides
Implemented model for chloride ingress is based on (Kwon, Na et al. 2009). Let us consider 1D
transient problem of chloride ingress in concrete with initially free chloride content
C x, t CS 1 erf
2 Dm t f ( w)t
(4.81)
where CS is the chloride content at surface in kgm-3, Dm is the averaged diffusion coefficient at
time t in mm2 s-1, x is the position from the surface in mm and f(w) gives acceleration by
cracking and equals to one for a crack-free concrete. Cs and C can be related to concrete volume
or to binder volume, however, the units must be kept consistently through the computation.
Diffusion coefficient D(t) is assumed to decrease over time t according to the power law
ATENA Theory
227
t
D t Dref ref
t
(4.82)
where m is a decay rate (sometimes called an age factor). If m=0, a constant value of D(t)=Dref is
recovered. This model was proposed by (Collepardi, Marcialis et al. 1972). Nowadays it became
clear that this assumption is too conservative and is not generally recommended. The mean
diffusion coefficient Dm is obtained by averaging D(t) over time of interest
m
t
Dref tref
tref
1
Dm (t ) Dref
d
,t tR
1 m t
t0
(4.83)
t m tref
Dm (t ) Dref 1 R
, t tR
t 1 m t R
(4.84)
where tR is time when diffusion coefficient is assumed to be constant and is generally taken as 30
years. tref corresponds to time when the diffusion coefficient was measured. Fig. 6-2 shows
characteristic evolution of diffusion coefficients over time.
The mean diffusion coefficient increases when cracks are present in the concrete. Based on
recent results, the following scaling function is proposed (Kwon, Na et al. 2009)
f ( w) 31.61w2 4.73w 1
(4.85)
where w stands for crack width in mm. The crack width 0.3 mm increases mean diffusion
coefficient by a factor of 5.26. In reality, crack width evolves and incremental solution needs to
be formulated. The mean coefficient Dm,w(t) incorporating crack width is evaluated from a crack
increment
Dm , w (t )
w
n
(4.86)
w(ti 1 ) w(ti )
i 0
If last values of f(w) and w are stored, Eq. (4.86) can be evaluated only in the actual time step.
This speeds up the solution.
228
Fig. 6-2. Evolution of actual and mean diffusion coefficients for standard concrete, based on data
from (Kwon, Na et al. 2009).
t
Da t ke kc DCl (t0 ) 0 Da
t
(4.87)
where ke<0.27,3.88> is the environment factor, kc<0.79,2.08> is the curing factor, Dcl(t0) is
the measured diffusion coefficient determined at time t0, m<0.2,0.93> is the age factor and
Da<1.25,3.25> is the partial factor. In our notation, Da(t)=Dm(t) and t0=tref.
To our opinion, the most relevant and well documented field data come from 10 years exposure
tests (Luping, Tang et al. 2007). Fig. 6-3 shows the apparent diffusion coefficient in dependence
of water-binder ratio. In this particular case, tref=10 years, m is uknown, Dref=(1-m)Da, tR can be
assumed as 30 years.
ATENA Theory
229
Fig. 6-3. Fitted apparent diffusion coefficients from 10-years exposure of concrete (Luping, Tang et
al. 2007).
Let us assume characteristic value Cs 10.3% of chlorides per binder for submerged concrete
without further reductions (Table 8.5 in DuraCrete). The critical level for corrosion is 1.85 % per
binder (Table 8.7 in DuraCrete). The concrete cover is taken as 100 mm. Computed induction
230
time according to Eq. (4.81) is summarized in Table 6.3-1. Crack width is considered since the
beginning of exposure.
Table 6.3-1 Induction time for chloride corrosion of submerged concrete, in dependence on original
crack width.
Crack
(mm)
74.58
0.1
36.02
0.2
15.70
0.3
7.76
6.4 References
Collepardi, M., A. Marcialis, et al. (1972). "Penetration of Chloride Ions into Cement Pastes and
Concrete." Journal of the American Ceramic Society 55: 534-535.
III, T. E. U. B. E. (2000). DuraCrete Final Technical Report. General Guidelines for Durability
Design and Redesign. Doc. BE95-1347/R17.
Kwon, S.-J. and U.-J. Na (2011). "Prediction of Durability for RC Columns with Crack and Joint
under Carbonation Based on Probabilistic Approach." Int. Journal of Concrete Structures
and Materials 5(1): 11-18.
Kwon, S. J., U. J. Na, et al. (2009). "Service Life Prediction of Concrete Wharves with Earlyaged Crack: Probabilistic Approach for Chloride Diffusion." Structural Safety 31(1): 7583.
Luping, Tang, et al. (2007). Chloride Ingress and Reinforcement Corrosion in Concrete under
De-Icing Highway Environment A Study after 10 Years Field Exposure, SP Sveriges
Tekniska Forskningsinstitut. Vol. SP Report 2007:76.
Papadakis, V. G. (2000). "Effect of Supplementary Cementing Materials on Concrete Resistance
Against Carbonation and Chloride Ingress." Cement Concrete Research 30(2): 291-299.
Papadakis, V. G. and S. Tsimas (2002). "Supplementary Cementing Materials in Concrete. Part
I: Efficiency and Design." Cement and Concrete Research 32(10): 15251532.
ATENA Theory
231
7 TRANSPORT ANALYSIS
As pointed out in the previous section, creep material behaviour of concrete strongly depends on
moisture and temperature conditions. Some constitutive models for creep in ATENA can pay
regards to these factors and based on previously computed moisture and temperature histories
within the structure they can predict concrete behaviour more accurately. This section describes
a module called CCStructuresTransport that is used to calculate the histories. A more accurate
creep analysis then typically consists of two steps: firstly execute CCStructuresTransport
module and calculate the moisture and humidity histories of the structure and secondly execute
CCStructuresCreep module to carry out the actual static analysis. Of course, for both analyses
we have to prepare an appropriate model. Export/Import of the results between the modules is
already done by ATENA automatically.
To be exact, both the transport and static analysis should be executed simultaneously but as
moisture and temperature transport does not depend significantly on structural deformations, i.e.
coupling of the analyses is low, the implemented staggered solution yields sufficiently
accurate results.
The governing equations for moisture transport read (for representative volume REV] :
w ( we wn )
div( J w )
t
t
(5.1)
where:
w is total water content defined as a ratio of weight of water at current time t to weight of
water and cement at time t0 0 in REV, [mass/mass], e.g. [kg/kg]
we , wn = stands for the amounts of free and fixed (i.e. bound) water contents, [mass/mass],
J w = moisture flux, [length*mass/ (time*mass)]. e.g. [m/day],
t =time, [time], e.g. [day].
The moisture flux is computed by
J w Dwwe
(5.2)
where
Dw is moisture diffusivity tensor of concrete [m2/day],
is gradient operator.
Note that in (5.2) only diffusion of water vapor is considered. Moisture advection is negligible.
The equations (5.1) and (5.2) can be also written as being dependent on w or relative moisture h .
A relationship between h and w is given by
w w( h )
(5.3)
(5.4)
233
A special attention must be paid to calculation of the above time derivatives and integration of
the governing equations. For example, in case of usual Gauss integration and use of exact time
derivatives the solution may suffer from mass losses. To remedy the problem the
CCStructuresTransport module integrates the structure, i.e. all the individual finite elements in
nodes and time derivatives are calculated numerically (Jendele 2001). This integration is similar
to use of finite volume method, which is also known to be robust against the mass losses.
Heat transfer is governed by similar equation
Q
T
CT (T Tref ) CT
div( J T )
t t
t
(5.5)
where
Q is total amount of energy in a unit volume [J/m3]
esses amount of hydration heat
t t t t
J
within unit volume i.e Qh , 3 , Equation (5.5) changes to
m
T Qh
CT (T Tref ) Qh CT
div ( J T )
t
t
t
(5.6)
J
Heat flux JT , 2 is calculated by
m s
JT KT grad (T )
(5.7)
t 3
wn wh 0.21 c e
e te
(5.8)
where
234
te h T dt
(5.9)
where dt is time increment after the mould has been removed and coefficients T , h are
calculated by
1
1 (3.5 3.5h) 4
U 1 1
h
R
T0 T
T exp
(5.10)
(5.11)
Uh
the symbol U h stands for activation energy of hydration and R is gas
R
Uh
constant. According to (Bazant 1986)
2700 0 K . T, T0 are real and reference concrete
R
0
temperature expressed in K . The reference temperature is given by
In the fraction
T0 273.15 25
(5.12)
The following figure depicts relationship between real t and equivalent time te for the case of
constant temperature
linear, because with increase of time the amount of fixed water (due to hydration) wh is
increasing as well and it involves gradual decrease of relative moisture h .
ATENA Theory
235
The amount of water that was needed for hydration of concrete according to Equation (5.8) for
the case of c 300 kg is shown below:
(5.13)
and they are to be discretized. Let the left-hand side part of (5.1) and (5.4) is denoted
LHSh , LHST , respectively. The subscript h and T indicates moisture and temperature flux.
Similar subscripts are also used for right-hand-side of the equations, RHS h , RHST . Notice that
RHS expressions do not include the divergence operator!
LHS h
w wh
t
(5.14)
T Qh
t
t
(5.15)
LHST CT
236
RHSh J w J h
(5.16)
RHST J T
(5.17)
The strip over an entity in the above equations means that the entity is vector. (Scalar entities do
not have the strip). The fluxes J w J h are identical, i.e. the subscript w indicates also moisture
phase. Using the above notation Equations (5.1) and (5.5) can be written as follows
(5.19)
wh wh te wh
h T
t
te t
te
For the next derivation, let us write Equations(5.14), (5.15) in a general form:
LHS h chh
h
w
T
chw
chT
ch 0
t
t
t
(5.20)
LHST cTh
h
w
T
cTw
cTT
cT 0
t
t
t
(5.22)
cTh cTw 0; cTT 0; cT 0
ATENA Theory
Qh
0
t
237
The parameter cTT is in ATENA an input material parameter, ch 0 is computed from(5.19), i.e.
ch 0
wh
w
w
. Their values depend on a
0;
h T . The solution also includes expressions
te
h
T
constitutive model being used in the solution. For more information please refer to Section
Material Constitutive Model.
For right-hand sides we can write in similar manner:
h NT h;
h N h
w N T w;
w N w
T NT T ;
T N T
(5.24)
where
h , w, T stands for vectors of the corresponding entities. The vectors have dimension n equal
N1
x
T
N
N 1
y
N1
z
N 2
x
N 2
y
N 2
z
N n
x
N n
...
y
N n
...
z
...
Using (5.24) Equations (5.20) and (5.21) can be written in the form
238
h
w
T
chw N T
chT N T
ch 0
t
t
t
LHSh chh N T
(5.25)
LHST cTh N T
h
w
T
cTw N T
cTT N T
cT 0
t
t
t
and
RHS h khh N h khw N w khT N T kh 0
T
(5.26)
RHST kTh N h kTw N w kTT N T kT 0
T
The resulting set of equations are solved iteratively using finite element method, see
(Zienkiewicz and Taylor 1989), (weak formulation, in which the shape functions N are used as
weight function):
N LHS
div( RHS h ) dV 0
N LHS
(5.27)
div( RHST ) dV 0
where V is volume of the analyzed structure. Each of the above equations represents a set of
equations with dimension equal to number of finite nodes n. Note that div( RHSh ) and
div ( RHST ) are scalars !
In the next derivation the two parts of (5.27) are dealt with separately.
N LHS dV N c
h
hh
NT
hh
h
w
T
chw N T
chT N T
ch 0 dV
t
t
t
NN T dV
cchh
h
w
chw NN T dV
...
t V
t
h0
NdV
(5.28)
h
w
cchw
...cc h 0
t
t
T h
T w
T T
N
LHS
dV
N
c
N
c
N
c
N
c
dV
T
Th
Tw
TT
T
0
V
V
t
t
t
ccTh
h
w
ccTw
...ccT 0
t
t
(5.29)
239
... cc h 0 ch 0 NdV
V
(5.30)
The second part of (5.27) are calculated using Green theorem (5.36):
N div( RHS ) dV N n
T
s
RHS h dS N RHSh dV
V
k N h k N w k N T k dS
N k N h k N w k N T k dV
N nsT
hh
hw
hT
h0
(5.31)
hh
hw
hT
h0
kkhh N khh N
dV
kkhw N khw N
dV
kk h 0 N kh 0 dV
(5.32)
...
kkTT N kTT N
V
kk T 0 N kT 0 dV
V
and also
240
dV
J hh N
nsT khh N dS
J hw N
nsT khw N dS
...
JTT N
S
nsT kTT N dS
T
J h 0 N nsT kh 0 dS
S
JT 0 N nsT kT 0 dS
(5.33)
Using (5.28) to (5.33) the original governing equations (5.27) can be written as follows:
h
w
T
cchw
cchT
cc h 0 kkhh h kkhw w kkhT T kk h 0
t
t
t
J hh h J hw w J hT T J h 0
cchh
(5.34)
h
w
T
ccTw
ccTT
ccT 0 kkTh h kkTw w kkTT T kk T 0
t
t
t
J Th h J Tw w J TT T J T 0
ccTh
After sorting the unknown variables h , T by finite nodes into a single vector , Equation (5.34)
will read
cc
kk cc 0 kk 0 J J 0
t
(5.35)
The right-hand side (5.35) is non-zero only for non-zero prescribed boundary conditions and
hence it has character of load vector in a static analysis.
In (5.31) we used Green theorem. It states:
u div(v )dV u n
T
s
v dS u v dV
V
(5.36)
u div(v )dV u n
T
s
v dS u v dV
V
where
ATENA Theory
241
u
u x
u
y
u1
x
u2
u x
...
un
x
u
z
u1
y
u2
y
...
un
y
u1
z
u2
z
...
un
z
(5.37)
where t t K ,
t t
t t
K t t + t t C
t t
t t J
(5.38)
t t
is vector of
unknown variables. All of these apply for time t t . Equation (5.38) is solved iteratively. i.e.
the vector
t t
where index
(i )
t t (i ) t t (i 1) t t (i )
t t ( i )
(5.39)
t t and iteration ( i ) :
t t ( i )
t t ( i 1)
-1 and
K
-1 t t (i ) J
t t (i 1) K
t t ( i )
J is derived from
(5.40)
t t ( i 1)
242
t (1 ) t t
(5.41)
Depending on a particular value of the parameter we get the well known Euler implicit
integration (for =1), trapezoidal Crank Nicholson scheme (for =0.5), Galerkin integration
method (for =2/3) or even Euler explicit scheme (for =0), which is only conditionally stable.
Solution predictor:
t t
t t
t
t
(5.42)
Solution corrector:
t t
1
t t t
t
t
(5.43)
J .
Using the above after some mathematical manipulation we derive final expressions for K,
These read:
= K 1 C
K
1
J J K t t 1 t C t t t
t
(5.44)
t
t
2
2
t prev
t
t
t
t prev
t t prev t
(5.45)
where
index prev indicates that the entity comes from time preceding time t Note that we assume that all
entities from time t are already known and we solve for their values at time t t .
Solution corrector:
t t
2
t
t t t
t
t
t
ATENA Theory
(5.46)
243
t prev t t t
t
t
t t prev
t
t t prev
t t prev
t prev
(5.47)
J :
Similar to (5.44) we have here for K,
= t Kt t t C 2t t
K
n 1
n
n
n 1
n
n 1
t t t t
C 2t t t 2t
J t t t t
J K t t
n 1
n 1
t t
n 1
n 1
tn tn 1 tn t t tn
2
n 1
(5.48)
n 1
n 1
t t (i ) t t (i 1) t t (i )
(5.49)
where is a new damping factor. The factor is typically set to something in range 0.3...1
depending on current convergence behaviour of the problem.
CCModelBaXi94
For heat transport a simple constant linear model is implemented. For moisture transport a
nonlinear model based on the model (Xi, Bazant et al. 1993; Xi, Bazant et al. 1994) has been
developed.
It can be used for temperatures in range T 5 ...75 0C and moisture H 0 ...1 . It is
important to note that the model was originally written only for mortar hence, it is inaccurate for
concrete with an aggregate having higher permeability (i.e. diffusivity) and/or absorption. The
model has the following main parameters
244
Type of cement
Water-cement ratio wc
w
c
As already pointed out, the model does not account for aggregate, i.e. it predict moisture move
only in pores filled by water-cement paste.
w
The main entity of the model is water content w w(h, t , T , ) . It is defined as follows:
c
Gw
Gw,0 G c
(5.50)
where
kg
Gw is water content in mortar at time t , 3
,
m of morter
kg
Gw,0 is water content at time zero, 3
,
m of morter
kg
Gc is amount of cement at time zero, 3
.
m of morter
Mortar here stands for mixture of water and cement. If concrete material is to be considered, then
w can be calculated by
Gw
w
where
Vconcrete
Vmortar
V
V
Gw,0 concrete G c concrete
Vmortar
Vmortar
w
G
w,0 G
c
G
(5.51)
Vconcrete
is ratio of total volume to (only) volume of mortar (i.e. water and cement) and G
Vmortar
are corresponding amounts of water and cements in concrete, (i.e. not only in
kg
mortar!) 3
.
m
of
concrete
The model itself already accounts for moisture used by hydration process. i.e.
w
0 . As a
t
245
3
c te
1
1
0.21 G
c
e te
te 3
te 3
Gc
G
wh
0.21
0.21
w,0 G
c
w,0 G
c
Gw,0 Gc
G
G
e te
e te
(5.52)
c
Gc
G
w,0 G
c
Gw,0 Gc G
(5.53)
More detailed description of the model is beyond scope of this document and the reader is
referred to in (Xi, Bazant et al. 1993; Xi, Bazant et al. 1994).
CCTransportMaterial
CCTransport material is a simple constitutive law that allow users to enter laboratorily measured
moisture and heat characteristics. Refering to Equations (5.1) and (5.5) heat and moisture flow
governing equations can be written in the following general form:
Heat :
Q
h
T
w
CTh
CTT
CTw
CTt KTh grad (h) KTT grad (T ) KTw grad ( w) KTgrav
t
t
t
t
x
Moisture :
w
h
T
w
Cwh
CwT
Cww
Cwt Dwh grad (h) DwT grad (T ) Dww grad ( w) Dwgrav
t
t
t
t
x
(5.54)
The parameters CTh , CTT K wgrav are calculated as:
246
(5.55)
0
Dww Dww
f Dhww (h) f DTww (T ) f Dt ww (t )
0
Dwgrav Dwgrav
f Dhwgrav (h) f DTwgrav (T ) f Dt wgrav (t )
0
and the constant parameters CTh0 thru Dwgrav
and functions fChTh (h) thru f DTwgrav (T ) are input
parameters, (to be possibly obtained from some experiments). The functions are defined as
multilinear functions and only their ids are input into CCTransportMaterial model definition.
Note that gravity terms in RHS of (5.54) have a little physical justification in heat and moisture
diffusion gathered transports, nevertheless, they are included to allow using this material law for
solution of other kinds of transport problems.
CCTransportMaterialLevel7 material
CCTransport materialLevel7 is an extension of the above CCMaterialTransport material in the
way it automatically computes moisture and temperature capacity and conductivity/difussivity
incl. "sink" terms regarding hydration, (i.e. rate of hydration heat and mosture consumption
during connrete hydration). In terms of the above nomenclature this upper material level
calculates CTT , KTT , CTt , Cwh , Dwh , Cwt . As already mentined, the presented material adds on its
bottom level, i.e. CCMaterialTransport. All parameters and characterisctics from the bottom
level, (ie. those from CCMaterialTransport) can still be input and used. They typically serve for a
refinement/addition of parameters generated by the upper material level. The result from the
bottom an upper level are simply added to form final characteristics of the material model
CCTransportMaterialLevel7. Note that default values of CTT , KTT , CTt , Cwh , Dwh , Cwt in the bottom
level are by default set to zero.
Hydration heat and affinity hydration model
ATENA Theory
247
The most important part of the presented model is computation of concrete hydration maturity factor.
It is accompanied by calculation of generated hydration heat and consumed hydration moisture. The
analysis is based on the affinity hydration model, which provides a framework for accommodating all
stages of cement hydration.
Consider hydrating cement under isothermal temperature 25oC a relative humidity h 1 . At this
temperature, the rate of hydration maturity factor , 0...1 can be expressed by chemical affinity
A A ( ) :
25
25
A25
t
(5.56)
where A stands for the chemical affinity, [ s 1 ], The expression already include coefficient
E
exp a . Hence A 25 is not normalized and refers to temperature 25oC. For different
RT
temperature it is replaced by A , see (5.60). R is gas constant 8314.41
J
, T is temperature,
kmol K
[K] and Ea is 40 kJ/mol. It is worthy to note the incorporation of the maturity method into (5.56)
. A characteristic time might be introduced to express an affinity A (Bernard, Ulm et al. 2003).
The affinity property can be obtained experimentally or analytically. Using experimental
approach, heat flow q (t ) that corresponds to the hydration heat Qh Qh (t ) is meassured in an
isothermal calorimetry.
Alternatively, the hydration material parameters are computed by an analytical micro-scale
model that accounts for the majority of underlying chemical reactions as well as topology of
cement grains (with the consequence to hydration kinetics). The solution stems from (Smilauer
and Bittnar 2006) and it employs discrete hydration model CEMHYD3D (Bentz 2005) allowing
to account for particle size distribution of cement, chemical composition of cement, temperature
and moisture history in concrete etc.
Having history of Qh (for T 273.15 25, 1 ), the approximation of parameter is given by
1
Qh , pot
Qh
Qh , pot
(5.57)
Qh
A25
t
t
(5.58)
where Qh, pot is potential hydration heat, [J/kg]. Hence the normalized heat flow
Qh
under
Qh , pot
248
Ea
A 25 B1 2 exp
exp
RT
(5.59)
where B1 ,[ s 1 ], B2 , [-] are coefficients to be calibrated, is the ultimate hydration degree, [-],
and represents microdiffusion of free water through formed hydrates, [-].
The parameters in
(5.60)
For example, simulating isothermal hydration at 35oC means scaling A 25 with a factor of 1.651
at a given time. This means that hydrating concrete for 10 hours at 35oC 35C releases the same
amount of heat as concrete hydrating for 16.51 hours under 25C. Note that setting Ea 0
ignores the e ect of temperature and proceeds the hydration under 25C.
Gawin et al. (Gawin, Pesavento et al. 2006), among others, added the effect of relative humidity.
The extension of (5.58) leads to
1
Qh , pot
Qh
AT h
t
t
1
1 a ah
(5.61)
(5.62)
where h h (h) accounts for the reduction of capillary moisture. h is relative humidity r,
(Bazant and Najjar 1972). a is material parameter, typically a 7.5 . Depending on curing
conditions is calculated as follows:
Sealed curing:
w/c
, 1
0.42
(5.63)
w/c
, 1
0.36
(5.64)
Saturated curing:
w / c is water-cement ratio.
Substituting (5.59) and (5.62) into (5.61) yields final equation to predict development of
hydration heat. As it is difficult to express function analytically (from (5.59), (5.61)), the
above equations are integrated numerically.
ATENA Theory
249
Note that Qh is calculated in the same unit as is entered the parameter Qh, pot . If the governing
equations are written for unit volume and Qh, pot is given per cement unit weight, then Qh must
be multiplied by fraction of cement mass mcement and total volume of concrete Vtot .
Heat capacity
The model assumes the following components of concrete: aggregate, filler, water and cement.
Total mass of concrete in one cubic meter results from individual masses of components:
mconcr maggregate m filler m paste
m paste mcement mwater
(5.65)
where mconcr is mass of concrete per a unit volume. Similarly for mass of aggregate maggregate ,
mass of filler m filler , mass of water mwater and mass of cement mcement . Corresponding volumes
are Vaggregate maggregate / aggregate , V filler m filler / filler etc. i stands for mass density of the phase
i. Having total volume Vconcr Vaggregate V filler Vwater Vcement , we can calculate phase fractions
f aggregate Vaggregate / Vconcr and similarly for the remaining phases.
Heat capacity and its evolution of cement paste (cement+water) was studied in (Bentz 2007) at
230C for w/c between 0.3 and 0.5. The capacity of fresh cement paste yields
Cconcrete f aggregateCaggregate f filler C filler C paste
(5.66)
where Cconcrete is concrete capacity (per unit volume) and akin for aggregate, filler and cement
paste. The last term, i.e. C paste depends also on degree of hydration and is calculated by
(5.67)
Heat conductivity
The thermal conductivity of cement paste was found to remain in the range 0.9-1.05 Wm-1K-1 for
arbitrary degree of hydration, for both sealed and saturated curing conditions, and for w/c from
0:3 to 0.4 (Bentz 2007). Water in the capillaries has the thermal conductivity 0.604 Wm-1K-1
(Bentz 2007). The thermal conductivity of hardened concrete varies between 0.85 and 3.5 Wm1 -1
K (Neville 1997) p.375, depending strongly on an aggregate type.
Thermal conductivity also depends on the saturation state of concrete. For example, a structural
concrete made from normal-weight aggregate with a unit mass of 2240 kg/m3 yields = 1.696
Wm-1K-1 for protected and 1.904 for weather exposed conditions (Neville 1997) , p. 376.
250
Figure 7-1. Thermal conductivity of concrete according to the Czech code CSN 731209.
Figure 7-1 summarizes thermal conductivities for ordinary concrete depending on concrete unit
mass and saturation conditions, according to (Neville 1997) and a former Czech standard CSN
731208. The latter considers 1.5 for a dry concrete and 1.7 Wm-1K-1 for a water-saturated
concrete.
Faria et al. (Faria, Azenha et al. 2006) applied the evolution of concrete conductivity with
regards to
0 1.0 0.248
where is the conductivity of fully hardened concrete, i.e. in infinite time.
The model implemented in Atena, i.e. CCTransportMaterialLevel3 stems from homogenization
theories. Consider conductivity of cement paste paste and aggregates aggregate such that
paste aggregate . Corresponding volume fractions are f paste , f aggregate . Hashin-Shtrikman lower
concrete,low and upper bounds concrete,upper are (Bentz 2007)
concrete,low, paste
concrete,upper , aggregate
(5.68)
concrete
ATENA Theory
concrete.low, concrete,upper ,
2
1.33 0.33
(5.69)
251
aggregates varies from 0 to 1. Important thermal conductivities: limestone 1.26 - 1.33, sandstone
1.7, granite 1.7 - 4.0 Wm-1K-1 .
The above equations for homogenization are written for phases paste-aggregates. In atena the
homogenization is carried out as follows:
1. homogenize phases cement - water -> phase paste.
2. homogenize phases paste - filler -> phase paste with filler
3. homogenize phases paste with filler - air -> phase paste with filler and air
4. homogenize phase paste with filler and air - aggregates -> concrete
Note that filler and aggregate is in this case treated as one component and the same applies for
water and cement, (being the component paste). Volume averaging technique is used to calculate
corresponding properties of paste and mixed aggregate.
t
t
(5.70)
(5.71)
Ch , t
252
Moisture capacity
Moisture content at unit volume w,[kgm -3 ] is calculated a simple expression
w wf
b 1 h
bh
(5.72)
where w f ,[kgm-3 ] is the free water saturation and b is dimensionless approximation factor,
which must always be greater than one. It can be determined from the equilibrium water content
w80 at relative humidity h 0.8 by substituting the corresponding numerical values in equation
(5.72):
b
h( w f w80 )
w f h w80
(5.73)
2
h
b h
Ch
(5.74)
The above expression is applicable for analyses using reference unit volume. If reference unit
weight of the structure is preferred, then we employ moisture capacity C C / , kg/kg , where
kg
driven by water pressure) can be neglected. Hence, moisture flux qh , 2 is calculated by the
m s
kg
equation qh Dh h , where total moisture diffusivity Dh ,
is calculated as sum of water
ms
Dhw and watervapour Dhwv diffusivity:
Dh Dhw Dhwv
(5.75)
w
h
Dhw Dww
(5.76)
Dww
3.8 A21000
1
wf
(5.77)
ATENA Theory
253
kg
and A is water absorption coefficient, 2 0.5 .
m s
Water vapour permeability
kg
Dpwv ,
:
m s Pa
D pwv
(5.78)
where is the water vapor diffusion resistance factor and is the vapor diffusion coefficient
kg
in air
m s Pa
1.81
0.00002306 pa T 273.15
R
T 273.15 pa 273.15
Mw
(5.79)
( psat h)
p
D pwv
D pwv psat
h
h
(5.80)
Any expression to calculate pressure of saturated water vapour can be used. The presented model
uses
psat 611e
aT
T0 T
, Pa
(5.81)
parameters
are
254
The above table is based on fitting predicted results from CEMHYD3D analysis by (5.59), see
Table 7.3-5 and Figure 7-3. The simulations were carried out on CEMHYD3Ds microstructures
50 50 50 m and with the activation energy 38.3 kJ/mol. Saturated curing conditions were
assumed, since sealed conditions will be obtained from coupling with moisture transport. Table
7.3-5 specifies input data for selected Portland cements.
Figure 7-3 Fit of selected cements to the affinity model, w/c = 0.4
The majority of concretes is produced from blended cements (CEM II - CEM V), hence it is
necessary to scale down Q pot by approximately 30 %. This is a common Portland clinker
substitution in the majority of blended cements in Europe.
There are other default parameters, which are not specified here: QW POT= 0.42, TH INIT = 0,
ALPHA INIT = 0, TEMPERATURE INCR MAX =0.1, H80 = 0.8, TEMP0 = 234.18, A WV =
17.08, TEMP0 ICE = 272.44 ,A WV ICE = 22.44
The parameter A 7.5 expresses hydration slow-down with regards to relative humidity. The
hydration practically stops at 0.8.
ATENA Theory
255
Parameters in Figure 7-1 are computed for saturated state. When = 1, the hydration proceeds
as there is saturated water environment around concrete. Under standard circumstamces,
hydration consumes water, which decreases relative humidity in the calculation. Three
parameters are related to moisture transport and are given for ordinary structural concrete:
W80 expresses total mass of free water at =80%. Standard value is 50 kg/m 3 for
structural concrete.
A W is water absorption coe cient, whose value spans the range 0.25-0.846 kgm 2 h
0.5 ].
MI WV is the water vapor di usion resistance factor, spanning 210-260 [-] for structural
concrete.
Parameters specifying specific heat capacity for concrete components are summarized in Table
7.3-2. Values are obtained from http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/density-solidsd_1265.html, http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/specific-heat-solids-d_154.html
Parameters specifying specific heat conductivity for concrete components are summarized in
Table 7.3-3. Sources from http://www-odp.tamu.edu/publications/192_SR/109/109_5.htm
Concrete strength classes strongly depend on the amount of cement in concrete. Table 7.3-4
specifies approximate compositions for major concrete classes used in EN 206-1. The
calculation assumes 5 % of entrained air in the concrete, cement density 3220 kg/m 3 and
aggregate density 2800 kg/m 3 .
Table 7.3-2 Parameters specifying density and specic heat capacity for concrete components
256
Ready-mix concrete is assumed, which requires rather higher w/c due to workability and
pumping issues. The parameters CEMENT DENSITY, WATER DENSITY, AGGREGATE
DENSITY, FILLER DENSITY are provided in Table 7.3-2 in the units [kg/m 3 ].
Table 7.3-4 Approximate composition for major concrete classes used in EN206-1
ATENA Theory
257
258
(5.82)
where:
T (t ) =
T1 =
temperature
maximum
of
radiation
temperature
of
source
radiation
as
source
function
[C]
of
according
time
[C],
to
(5.82)
t = time [minutes]
Time development of temperature of radiation source is depicted in the figure below. For time
t 0 Equation (5.82) yields T (0) 0 and hence, it is necessary to supplement (5.82) by
requirement T (t ) Tambiant ,ini , where Tambiant ,ini is initial ambient temperature prior the fire broke
up, (typically something about 20 C).
ATENA Theory
259
The heat is transferred from the fire gas to the exposed structure through radiation and
convection. At high temperatures the radiation dominates. The radiation is expressed by the
resulting emissivity factor, which takes into account emissivity of the fire source, , and
absorptivity of the heated surface, . The convection is calculated from the temperature
difference between the structure and ambient gas, depending on the gas velocity. Emissivity and
convection factors used for exposed surfaces are shown below
r 0.56, []
hc 50,
W
m 2 K
(5.83)
The convection and emissivity heat flux on a boundary exposed to fire is calculated as follows:
(5.84)
where
r = resulting emissivity factor of the radiation source and the heated surface [-],
qn = heat flow at the fire exposed boundary [W/m2],
hc = convection heat transfer coefficient [W/m2K].
Adiabatic boundary
Adiabatic boundary surface refers to a boundary surface, where no heat can pass in (and/or out)
the structure. Structural symmetry lines and areas are good example of this boundary conditions.
260
Nominal HV fire Temperature of the heat source is calculated by (5.82) and T1 (unless
it is manually input as temp_g_ref) is set to 1100 [C].
Modified HC fire This definition is much the same as the above with the only
difference that default value for T1 is 1300 [C].
Generic fire, (also refered to as User curve fire) - Temperature of the heat source is
assumed constant and is set value of temp_g_ref . If temp_g_ref is not inputed, then 1100
[C] is used.
In any case, the generated (or directly inputed) curve for T (t ) can be additionally modified in
time by a user supplied function time_id. The function takes one parameter, which is time of the
fire and it specifies a coffecient, by which the originally generater (or inputed) boundary
conditions should be multiplied. Of course, load variation in space can be modified by coeff_x,
coeff_y coefficients etc. in the same way as for any other generated element load, (for more
details see Atena Input file manual).
q 'h ,3
qh ,3
[kg/m 2 s]
(5.85)
qh qh ,1 qh ,2 qh ,3
The first part qh,1 includes moisture flux driven by gradient between ambient and surface relative
humidity hg and hb . hcw stands for moisture convection coefficient of the concrete-air interface.
The second part qh ,2 , accounts for moisture flux due evaporation driven by gradient of humidity
air ratio at the interface, i.e. xb and xg with the evaporation coefficient . By default
kg
(25 19v), 2 , where v is ambient air velocity, [m/s]. For more information see
m s
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/evaporation-water-surface-d_690.html.
The humidity air ratio, [-] is calculated as follows, (i reflects conditions in ambient air, i.e. i=g,
or in surface of the structure i.e. i=b):
ATENA Theory
261
xi
mi i
ma a
(5.86)
pa
R
(Ti 273.15)
Ma
(5.87)
where M a is weight of 1kmol of dry air, (assumed M a 28.96 kg/kmol). R is gas constant,
(R=8313JK-1), Ti is temperature in oC. pa is partial pressure of dry air, [Pa]
pa p hi pvw.sat
(5.88)
Here p stands for total air pressure, (typically normal air pressure p=101325Pa), hi is relative
humidity and pvw.sat is partial pressure of saturated water vapour at Ti, (see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_of_air)
pwv , sat 610.78 10
7.5Ti
Ti 237.3
(5.89)
The third part is moisture flux evaporated from concrete calculated by CEMSTONE, see
http://www.cemstone.com/concrete-evaporation-forecast-engineers.cfm. It yields nearly the
same
values
as
provided
by
ACPA
calculator,
see
http://apps.acpa.org/apps/EvaporationCalculator.aspx. TCg , TCb is ambient and surface
temperature in Celsia.
The heat flux consists also from two parts.
qT 1 hcT (Tg Tb ) rT (TKg4 TKb4 )
qT 2 qh hwe
(5.90)
qT qT 1 qT 2
The first part of the heat flux qT represents usual flux due to heat convection and emission. Its
computation resembles (5.84). hcT stands for heat convection coefficient of the concrete-air
W
interface 2 , rT is heat emissivity coefficient [-],
m K
W
temperatures in Kelvins and is Stephan-Boltzmann constant , 5.67 E 8, 2 4 . The
m K
second part takes into account heat consumption due to evaporation of moisture flux. By default
262
kJ
hwe 2270, is
assumed.
More
information
kg
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/evaporation-water-surface-d_690.html.
available
at
Both moisture and heat fluxes are typically computed using only their first or second part.
Therefore, the related ATENA input commands allows to read some boolean flags that specify,
which parts of the above fluxes should by accounted for and which should be skipped. For more
information refer to the ATENA input file manual.
7.6 References
BAZANT, Z. P. (1986). Mathematical Modelling of Moisture Diffusion and Pore Pressure,
Chapter 10. Concrete at High Temperature. Z. P. Bazant: 198-237.
BAZANT, Z. P. and W. THONGUTHAI (1978). Pore Pressure and Drying of Concrete at High
Temperature. Proceedings of the ASCE.
CELIA, M. A. and P. BINNING (1992). "A Mass Conservative Numerical Solution for TwoPhase Flow in Porous Media with Application to Unsaturated Flow." Water Resour. Res
28(10): 2819-2828.
CELIA, M. A., T. BOULOUTAS, et al. (1990). "A General Mass-Conservative Numerical
Solution for the Unsaturated Flow Equations." Water Resour. Res 27(7): 1438-1496.
DIERSCH, H. J. G. and P. PERROCHET (1998). On the primary variable switching technique
for simulating unsaturated-saturated flows, http://www.wasy.de/eng/prodinfo/flow/
swpool/swpool.htm#fef_manuals.
HUGHES, J. R. (1983). Analysis of Transient Algorithms with Particular Reference to Stability
Behaviour. Computational Methods for Transient Analysis, Elsevier Science Publishers
B.V.
JENDELE, L. (2001). ATENA Pollutant Transport Module - Theory. Prague, Edited PIT, ISBN
80-902722-4-X.
JENDELE, L. and D. V. PHILLIPS (1992). "Finite Element Software for Creep and Shrinkage
in Concrete." Computer and Structures 45 (1): 113-126.
REKTORYS, K. (1995). Pehled uit matematiky. Prague, Prometheus.
SEAGER, M. K. and A. GREENBAUM (1988). A SLAP for the Masses, Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory.
WOOD., W. L. (1990). Practical-Time Stepping Schemes. Oxford, Clarenton Press.
XI, Y., Z. P. BAZANT, et al. (1993). "Moisture Diffusion in Cementitious Materials, Adsorbtion
Isotherms." Advn. Cem. Bas. Mat. 1: 248-257.
XI, Y., Z. P. BAZANT, et al. (1994). "Moisture Diffusion in Cementitious Materials, Moisture
Capacity and Diffusivity." Advn. Cem. Bas. Mat. 1: 258-266.
ATENA Theory
263
264
8 DYNAMIC ANALYSIS
Currently ATENA software support two methods to carry out dynamic analysis: Newmarks
and Hughes method (Hughes 1983). If the parameter in Hughes- method equals zero,
the Hughes- degrades to Newmarks . Therefere, only Hughes is described here.
The method is based on Taylor series expansion of the displacements and velocities at time t:
u
t t
u t
2u t t 2 3u t t 3
u
t 2
3
t
t 2!
t 3!
t
2u t
3u t t t 2
u t t u t 2 t
t
t 3 2!
(6.1)
(6.2)
The above two equations represent the approximate displacement and velocity ( u t t and u t t )
by a truncated Taylor series. Looking at the remainder term (last term of the above
displacement),
R1
t t
u
t 3
3
2u t t 2u t
2
3
2
t
t t
t
3!
3!
t
3
t
u t t u t
3!
t
t
t
u u t 2
3
(6.3)
3u t t
t 3
2u t t 2u t
2
3
2
t 2
t
t t
2!
2!
t
t
t
t
u u t
(6.4)
The above parameters , are so caller Newmark , parameters. Their value is essential for
1
1
convergence of the this time marching scheme. It can be shown that , corresponds
2
6
1
1
to a linear acceleration within the time step, , yields constant acceleration. In any
2
4
1
case, the scheme is unconditionally stable, if , and it is only conditionally stable for
2
2
1
ATENA Theory
265
tcrit
2
1
1 2
2
2 2
2
(6.5)
Tn
2
3
(6.6)
0.551
More details on the methods convergency can be found in (Hughes 1983) and (Wood. 1990).
The final expression for structural displacements and velocities is obtained by substituting (6.3)
and (6.4) into Equation (6.1) and (6.2):
1
u t t u t t u t t 2 u t u t t
(6.7)
u t t u t t 1 u t u t t
(6.8)
(6.9)
where
(6.10)
The parameter specify the amount of an artificial damping that is to be applied in the
governing equation. As alredy pointed out, if 0 , then the time marching scheme reduces to
1
the Newmark method. The value provides maximum damping that results in a damping
3
ratio about 6%, when the time increment is 40% of the period of oscillation of the mode being
studied and smaller, if the oscillation period increases. A recommended value is about
0.05 .
For the actual execution it is advantages to rewrite (6.7) and (6.8) as follows
266
u t t u t t t 2 u t t
(6.11)
u t t u t u t t
(6.12)
1
u t t u t t u t t 2 u t
2
(6.13)
u t t u t t 1 u t
(6.14)
where
The expressions for u t t and u t t can be calculated at the beginning of each time increment, as
their values depend only on values at time t. Equation (6.10) is then solved iteratively for
t
t t
will involve velocity and
displacement increment ukt t ukt t ukt
1 . The displacement uk
acceleration increments
ukt t uk
t t
uk 1
t t
u t t uk 1 u t t
t 2
t 2
t t
uk
t t
t t
u
2k
t
(6.15)
u kt t u k u k 1
t t
t t
u t uk u t uk 1
t t
t t
t t
uk
t t
uk
(6.16)
where
K tefft
1
t
2
1 C
t
1 K
Refft ,kt 1 R t t F t t R t F t Mu t t 1 Cu t t Cu t
(6.17)
(6.18)
t
t t
The vector Refft ,kt is typically splitted in two parts R1,t
eff , k and R2, eff , k :
t
t
t
t
R1,t
eff , k R F Cu
t
t t
R2,t
F t t Mu t t 1 Cu t t
eff , k 1 R
ATENA Theory
(6.19)
267
The first one is computed only once at the beginning of the time steps and in each iteration it is
t
necessary to re-caulculate only R2,t
R t , F t , u t
eff , k . This concept also allows to forget values
during the iterarting procedure, whilst we have to rember only vectors u t t and u (and of
t
course, also R1,t
eff , k ) .
(6.20)
where d , d are user defined damping coefficients. These coefficients can be directly set as
user input data or they can be generated based on knowledge of modal damping parameters .
The parameters are defined by:
iT Ci iT ( d M d K )i 2ii
(6.21)
where:
d d i 2ii
(6.22)
Equations (6.20) introduces 2 parameters for damping and thus, if only 2 values of i are to be
used, they are directly substutited in (6.21), (resp. (6.22)) and solved for from this set of
equations.
However, in practice structural damping is more complicated and some sort of compromise must
be done. In this case structural damping properties are typically measured for more eigenmodes
and optimal values of coefficients d , d are calculated by least square method, i.e. we are
seeking minimum of the expression d d i 2ii . It yields the following set of equations
2
d
i
wi2
i2
d wi2 2
i
wi2i
(6.23)
d w d w 2 w ii
2
i
2
i
2
i
2
i
268
Rayleigh-Ritz method
Jacobi method
Ku 2Mu
(8.1)
where
is circular eigenfrequency
We are looking for a non-trivial solution, so that we solve for 2 that comes from
det(K 2 M ) 0
ATENA Theory
(8.2)
269
(8.3)
where
is matrix of base vectors k , k 1..m ,
(ui )
uiT Kui
uiT Mui
(8.4)
It can be proved that (ui ) converges from upper side to the corresponding circular
frequency i2 . The condition of minimum of (ui ) yields:
(ui )
0, k 1..m
ci ,k
(8.5)
B T M
(8.6)
(8.7)
CT AC D
270
(8.8)
then the matrices A and D have identical eigenvalues and they are diagonal elements of the
matrix D. The transformation matrix C is calculated in iterative manner
C S1 S 2 .......S k , k 1..
(8.9)
Sk 0
cos( ) 0 sin( )
0
1
0
sin( )
cos( )
0
0
0
0
0
1
(8.10)
The entries cos( ), sin( ) are put in i,j rows and columns and they are constructed in the
way that they will zeroize aij after the transformation. The other diagonal elements are equal
to 1 and the remaining off-diagonal elements are 0.
In the case of general eigenproblem the whole procedure of constructing S k is very similar.
The matrices S k now adopt the shape
0
0 0
1
1
Sk 0
1 0 a 0
0 1 0
b
1 0
0
0
0
0 1
(8.11)
Notice that the matrix S k is not orthogonal anymore. The two variables a,b are calculated to
zeroize off-diagonal elements i,j of the both matrices K and M. Eigenmodes of the problem
are then calculated as
aii'
'
bii
2
i
(8.12)
where aii' , bii' are diagonal elements of transformed (and diagonalized) matrices A, B.
Eigenvectors of the problem are columns of the transformation matrix C.
ATENA Theory
271
fi ,1 M ui ,1
(8.13)
(8.14)
(8.15)
and the iterating is stop, when ui ,k 1 ui ,k . The above described algorithm tends to converge
to the lowest eigenmodes. If any of these are to be skipped, the initial eigenvector ui ,1 must be
orthogonal to the corresponding eigenvectors. In practice, the vector ui ,k must orthogonalized
with respect to the skipped eigenvectors even during the iterating procedure, as the initial
orthogonality may get (due to some round-off errors) lost.
A U
k 1
k 1
k 1
T MU
B k 1 U
k 1
k 1
(8.16)
k 1
k 1
In the above
m is number of projection eigenmodes, (reasonably higher than the number of required
eigenmodes),
2 is matrix with eigenmodes (on its diagonal). Notice that eigenmodes for transformed and
the original eigenmode problem are the same.
The steps 1 thru 4 are repeated until the difference between the two subsequent operations is
negligible.
The solution algorithm (8.16) is in ATENA a bit modified in order to reduce CPU time and
RAM resources and is described below:
Step1- Inverse iteration method:
MU
U
k 1
U
KU
k 1
k 1
Step 2 - Raylegh quotient method:
T KU
U
T U
A U
k 1
k 1
k 1
MU
U
k 1
k 1
T
B U MU
k 1
k 1
k 1
k 1
k 1
T U
U
k 1 k 1
k 1
k 1
(8.17)
The advantage of this procedure over the one defined in (8.16) is that now you dont need to
store the original and factorised form of the matrix K. Only the factorised form is needed
during the iterations.
A special issue in this method is how to setup the initial vectors U1 . This is what we do in
ATENA. The first vector contains the diagonal elements of M. The next vectors are
constructed in the way that they have zeros everywhere except one entry. This entry
m
correspond to maximum ii and is set to 1.
kii
The procedure as it is , (because of Inverse iteration method), cannot solve for zero
eigenmodes. This may be a problem, especially if we want to analyze structural rigid body
motions or spurious energy modes. If this is the case, shift matrix K by an arbitrary value s ,
i.e. solve the associated eigenproblem
(K s M )us s2 Mus
(8.18)
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273
u us
2 s2 s
(8.19)
(8.20)
then number of negative diagonal elements in D equal to the number of eigenvalues smaller
than the shift . This way we can simply test, whether we missed an eigenvalue with the
calculated set of m eigenmodes or not
There are other methods that can be used to compute eigenvalues and eigenvectors of large
sparse eigensystem. Particularly popular is e.g. Lanczosh method (Bathe 1982). There exist
also several enhancements for the present Inverse subspace iteration method. For instance
using shifting technique may siginificantly improve convergency of the method, (especially if
some eigenvalues are close each other).
These improved technique may be implemented in the future. In any case, the current
ATENA implementation of eigenmodes analysis proves to solve the eigenmodes problem in
most case quite successfully.
9.2 References
BATHE, K. J. (1982). Finite Element Procedures in Engineering Analysis. Englewood Cliffs,
New Jersey 07632, Prentice Hall, Inc.
JENDELE, L. (1987). The Orthogonalization of Multiple Eigenvectors in Subspace Iteration
Method. IKM - XI. Internationaler Kongress ueber Anwendungen der Mathematik in
der Ingenieurwissenschaften, Weimar.
WOOD., W. L. (1990). Practical-Time Stepping Schemes. Oxford, Clarenton Press.
274
K
j 1
ij
u j ri , i 1..n
(9.1)
where Kij is an element i, j of a predictor matrix K, (i.e. usually structural stiffness matrix),
ri is an external force, (or unbalanced force) applied into i-th structural degree of freedom
(DOF) and finally ui is displacement (or displacement increment) at the same DOF. Such a
set of equations is always accompanied by many boundary conditions (BCs). They can be one
of the following:
Von-Neumann boundary conditions, (also called right-hand side (RHS) BCs). Number and
type of these BCs has no impact on dimension n of the problem (9.1). They are accumulated
in the vector r . This vector is assembled on the per-node basis for concentrated nodal forces
and/or per-element basis for nodal forces being equivalent to element loads.
The second type of boundary conditions are Dirichlet boundary conditions, (also called lefthand side (LHS) BCs). ATENA implementation of this type of BCs is now described. A
simple form of such BCs reads:
ul 0, l 1, n
ul ul 0 , l 1, n
(9.2)
These kinds of BCs typically represent structural supports with no displacements, (the first
equation) or with prescribed displacements ul 0 , (the second equation). Although most LHS
BCs are of the above form, (and only a few finite element packages offer anything better),
they are cases, when a more general LHS BC is required. Therefore, ATENA software
provides solution for implementing a form of Dirichlet BCs, where each degree of structural
freedom can be a linear combination of any other degrees of freedom. Mathematically, this is
expressed by:
ul ul 0
ATENA Theory
k1, n
lk uk , l 1, n
(9.3)
275
There are many cases, in which the above form of Dirichlet conditions proves helpful. Some
examples are discussed later in the Chapter. The important point about implementing
Equations (9.3) is that they are utilised already during assembling of the problem (9.1). It
means that, if we have m of these BCs, then final dimension of the matrix K becomes only
(n m) . This fact significantly reduces requirements towards computer storage.
In the following we shall call such boundary conditions as Complex Boundary Conditions,
or CBCs, (see also ATENA Input file manual, where the same name is used).
(9.4)
j 1, j l
Kij u j Kil ul
j 1, j l
(9.5)
K
j 1
ij
K il lk kj u j ri Kil ul 0 , i 1..n
(9.6)
The above set of equations could be already used to solve for the unknown displacements (or
displacement increments) u j . kj stands for k. j Kronecker delta tensor. The trouble is,
however, that even though the matrix K might be symmetric, the set of equations (9.6) is not
symmetric anymore. Thus, to preserve the symmetry, add an lk multiple of the row l , i.e.
j 1
lk K lj K ll lk kj u j lk rl K ll ul 0
(9.7)
K
j 1
kj
K kl lk kj u j rk K kl ul 0
(9.8)
K
n
j 1
K kl lk kj lk K lj K ll lk kj u j
kj
lk K lj K kl lk lk lk K ll kj u j
K
j 1
kj
rk K kl ul 0 lk rl lk K ll ul 0
276
(9.9)
Hence, the final form of the governing set of equations will read:
n
K
j 1
ij
K il lk kj ik lk K lj ik kj lk2 K ll u j
(9.10)
ri K il ul 0 ik lk rl K ll ul 0
K
j 1
ij
u j ri , i 1..n
(9.11)
where
K
K11
...
K i1
...
K k 1 lk K l1
...
K j1
...
K n1
...
K1i
...
K1k K1l lk
...
K1 j
...
...
...
...
K ii
...
...
...
K ik K il lk
...
...
...
K ij
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
... K ki lk K li
... K kk 2 K kl lk kk kk K ll
... K kj lk K lj
...
...
...
...
K ji
...
...
...
K jk K jl lk
...
...
...
K jj
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
K ni
...
...
K nk K nl lk
...
K nj
...
2
lk
...
K in
...
K kn lk K ln
...
K jn
...
K nn
K1n
(9.12)
r
r1 K1l ul 0
...
ri Kil ul 0
...
rk K kl ul 0 lk rl K ll ul 0
...
rj K jl ul 0
...
rn K nl ul 0
(9.13)
is now also
Providing the original matrix K is symmetric, i.e. K ij K ji , then the matrix K
symmetric, i.e. Kij K ji .
The displacement ul constrained by Equation (9.4) has a constant part ul 0 and a variable part
lk u k , in which ul depends only on a single u k . A more general form of this BC would be,
if ul depends on more displacements. It corresponds to the following form of the boundary
condition:
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277
ul ul 0 lk uk
(9.14)
In this case, the displacement ul is calculated as a constant part ul 0 plus a linear combination
K K
ij
il
lk
k ,k l
ri Kil ul 0 ik lk rl K ll ul 0
j 1
(9.15)
k ,k l
ul ul 0 lk uk , l 1, n , l {l1 , l2 ,...lr }
(9.16)
The problem is, however, that displacements u k in (9.16) need not be free but fixed by
another BC, k can run also through l, (resulting in a recursive formulation), more BCs can be
specified for the same ul , a particular BC can be specified more times and in more forms etc.
For example, we may have a set boundary equations that contains BCs
u1 u2 ,
u2 u1
(9.17)
u2 u1 , u1 0.003
(9.18)
or it can contain
u1 u2 ,
Both of these are correct. Unfortunately, the set can also contain
u1 u2 ,
u2 0.003, u2 u1 , u1 0.003
(9.19)
which is definitely wrong. Therefore, before any use of such set of BCs it is necessary to
detect and fix all redundant and contradictory multiple BCs present in it. It is easily done in
case of a simple set of BCs like the one above, but in real analyses with thousands of BCs in
the form (9.16), (some of them quite complex, i.e. k runs through many DOFs) the only way
to proceed is to treat (9.16) as a set of equations to be solved prior their use in (9.13).
Redundant BCs are ignored and contradictory BCs are fulfilled after their summation. Let us
suppose that all structural constraints are specified in the set of equation (9.16). This can be
written in matrix form
ul ul 0 A u k
(9.20)
The above relationship represents a system of algebraic linear equations. The system is
typically non-symmetric, sparse and has different number of rows (i.e. number of BCs) and
columns, (i.e. number of master and slave DOFs). Moreover, it is often ill-conditioned, with a
278
number of equations being linear combinations of the others, e.g. see the example in (9.17).
At the beginning it is often not known, which DOF is dependent, (i.e. slave) and which is
independent, (i.e. master), (e.g. see also (9.17)).
Based on the above properties the following procedure has been developed to solve the
problem (9.20):
1. Allocate "columns" for all slave and master DOFs, i.e. loop through all BCs in (9.16)
and allocate DOFs for both slave (i.e. LHS) and master (i.e. RHS) displacements ui .
2. Allocate storage for the matrix A and vectors ul , ul 0 in (9.20). The matrix has lr
number of rows (see (9.16)) and lc number of columns. lc is dimension of the DOFs
map created in the point add. 1.
3. Assemble the matrix A and the vectors ul , ul 0 .
4. Detect constant BCs, i.e. ul ul 0 and swap rows of A so that the rows corresponding
to constant BCs are pushed to the bottom.
5. Detect constant fixed DOFs, i.e. those with lk 0 and variable fixed DOFs, i.e. that
are those dependent on other (master) DOFs and having lk 0 .
6. Swap columns of A , so that the former DOFs are pushed to the right and the latter
DOFs to the left. The operations described at the point 5 and 6 are needed to assure
order, in which the constrained DOFs are eliminated. This is important for later
calculation of the structural reactions.
7. Using Gauss method triangulize the set of BC equations. The triangulization is carried
out in the standard way with the following differences.
a. Before eliminating entries of A located in column below akk , check for a nonzero entry in the row k. If all its entries are zero, then ignore this row and
proceed to the next one. (It is the case of multiple BCs having the same
content).
b. Check, whether the row k specifies BC for constant or variable DOF, (see
explanation in the point 5 above). In the former case push the row k to the
bottom and proceed to the next row.
c. Swap columns k ...lc so that abs ( akk ) becomes maximum.
d. If akk 0 , swap lines k ...lr to find a non-zero entry in akk . Thereafter,
swap columns k ...lc to find maximum akk .
e. Eliminate entries below akk as usually.
As it was already mentioned, the matrix A is typically very sparse. Hence, a special storage
schemes is used that stores only non-zero entries of A. The data are stored by rows. Each row
has a number of data series, i.e. sequences or chunks of consecutive non-zero data (within the
row). The data are in a three-dimensional container. For each such chunk of data we also
need to store its first position and length. This is done in two two-dimensional containers.
ATENA Theory
279
A0
0
0
0
0
a22
0
0
a23
a33
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
a26
0
a42
0
0
0
a44
0
0
a55
0
a56
a62
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
a66
0
0
a27
0
0
a57
0
a77
(9.21)
It is stored as follows ( A.data stores the actual data, A.rowbase stores base indices for nonzero entries in rows, A.rowlength contains dimension of non-zero data chunks; all arranged
by rows):
A.data (1)(1)(1) a11
A.data (2)(1)(1) a22 , A.data(2)(1)(2) a23 , A.data (2)(2)(1) a26 , A.data (2)(2)(2) a27
A.data (3)(1)(1) a33 ,
A.data (4)(1)(1) a42 , A.data(4)(2)(1) a44
.......
A.rowbase(1)(1) 1
A.rowbase(2)(1) 2, A.rowbase(2)(2) 6
A.rowbase(3)(1) 3
A.rowbase(4)(1) 2, A.rowbase(4)(2) 4
.....
A.rowlength(1)(1) 1
A.rowlength(2)(1) 2, A.rowlength(2)(2) 2
A.rowlength(3)(1) 1
A.rowlength(4)(1) 1, A.rowlength(4)(2) 1
(9.22)
280
they are arranged by columns). These two additional arrays make possible to skip all zero
entries during column-base operations. The resulting significant increase of triangularization
speed pays off for a small amount of an extra RAM that is needed to store A.columnbase and
A.columnlength .
The adopted procedure of triangularization many times swaps lines and/or columns of A. In
view of the adopted storage scheme it can be quite expensive procedure. To alleviate this
problem, the storage scheme includes four additional arrays, namely A.rowindex ,
A.rowinverseindex , A.columnindex and A.rowinverseindex . At the beginning
A.rowindex(i) i and similarly A.rowinverseindex (i ) i, i 1...lc . When a row r1 should be
swapped with a row r2 , the data in A.data remains unchanged and we swap only
corresponding row indices in A.rowindex , (and accordingly also entries in the array for
inverse mapping A.rowinverseindex ). The same strategy is used for swapping the columns.
As a result any swapping operation does not require any moving of actual data, (except of
swapping corresponding indices for mapping the rows and columns) and thus it is extremely
fast. On the other hand, in order to access aij we must use ai ' j ' , where i ' rowindex(i) and
j ' columnindex( j ) . The incurred CPU overhead is well acceptable, because the matrix A is
very sparse.
ATENA Theory
281
Note that all the above techniques are supported in ATENA finite element package, the last
one requiring implementation of CBCs in the form (9.14).
282
In the above example two blocks are connected to form a structure, where the top (smaller)
block is placed atop of the bottom (larger) block. Position of the top block is arbitrary with
respect to the bottom block. Unless the concept of CBCs is used, the meshes on interface of
the two blocks must be compatible, (see top of Fig. 10-2). On the other hand, the proposed
CBCs allow using of incompatible meshes, (see the bottom of Fig. 10-2). In this case the
mesh in each block is generated independently, which is significantly simpler. After they are
done, the proposed CBCs are applied to connect the interface nodes. (Typically the surface
with the finer mesh is fixed to the surface with the coarse mesh). The latter approach also
demonstrates possibility of a mesh refinement while still using well-structured and transparent
meshes. This is particularly useful in the case of complex numerical models.
ATENA Theory
283
i
m
l
n
p
j
k
bar 1
bar 2
For example, if we want to connect the node n to the embedding solid element, i.e. to nodes
4
hi ( r , s ), U i are element interpolation function and Ui are nodal displacements for the
underlying solid element, respectively. For displacement at the node n we can write
4
u (rn , sn ) hi (rn , sn ) U i . ( rn , sn ) are coordinates of the node n. Comparing this formula with
i 1
The beam finite element has native 3D geometry and its pre- and postprocessing
visualisation is more realistic than using its original 1D geometry.
It is simple to connect such beam elements to any adjacent 3D finite elements, e.g.
brick elements.
Mesh generation is easily done by any 3D solid element generator that can pull off
nonlinear hexahedral elements. It suffices to generate only the nodes 1 to 12 (with 3
displacement DOFs) and the three original beam nodes (each beam node has 3
displacement and 3 rotation DOFs) are generated automatically. The preprocessor
need not to support rotational DOFs.
284
Derivation of all ij coefficients and ui 0 constants for all nodes 1 to 12 is beyond the scope
of this document. Nevertheless, a similar procedure is used, as it was in the previous example.
ATENA package covers also Ahmad element for curved shell structures, see Chapter 3.12.
The usual 2D shape of shell element is in the same manner replaced by geometry of a 3D
nonlinear hexahedral element. Originally, the shell element has 3 displacements and 2
rotations at each node located at middle thickness of the shell. These 5 DOFs are in by use of
CBCs replaced by 3 displacements at the top and 2 displacements at the bottom at the
respective nodes from the hexahedron, (i.e. brick) geometry. Advantages of this approach are
the same as those in the case of the curvilinear beam above: simpler pre/post processing,
simpler connection to the adjacent 3D elements, no need to support rotational DOFs during
pre/post processing, no need for extra support for geometry of the shell element.
10.3 References
BATHE, K.J. (1982), Finite Element Procedures In Engineering Analysis, Prentice-Hall, Inc.,
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey 07632, ISBN 0-13-317305-4.
JENDELE, L, CERVENKA, J, CERVENKA V., " Bond in Finite Element Modelling of
Reinforced Concrete", Proceedings Euro-C 2003, Computatinal Modelling of Concrete
Structures, Swets & Zeitlinger, Lisse, The Netherlands, ISBN 90 809 536 3, 793-8036
ATENA Theory
285
INDEX
A
Adam-Bashfoth integration ............................ 243
axis
hydrostatic ................................................... 38
Microplane ................................................... 73
peak stress .................................................... 22
Rankine fracturing........................................ 35
reinforcement ............................................... 66
reinforcement bond ...................................... 69
biaxial......................................................... 17, 25
boundary condition........................................... 12
complex ....................................................... 12
simple........................................................... 12
smeared cracks-rotated................................. 28
tensile failure................................................ 26
confinement...................................................... 54
transformation .............................................. 16
variants......................................................... 43
Bigaj............................................................. 71
CC3DCementitious...................................... 34
constitutive tensor............................................... 6
CC3DNonLinCementitious ......................... 34
constutive model
CC3DNonLinCementitious2 ....................... 34
CC3DNonLinCementitious2Fatigue ........... 48
CC3DNonLinCementitious2User................ 34
CC3DNonLinCementitious2Variable.......... 34
crack
compressive failure...................................... 25
fixed ............................................................. 48
rotated .......................................................... 48
Cracking ........................................................... 19
Drucker Prager............................................. 61
basics.......................................................... 209
fracture process............................................ 25
Hookes law................................................. 15
ATENA Theory
287
creep model
CCModelB3............................................... 216
CCModelBP_KX....................................... 216
CCModelBP1_DATA................................ 216
CCModelBP2_DATA................................ 216
flux
heat............................................................. 234
CCModelCSN731202................................ 216
moisture...................................................... 233
CCModelGeneral....................................... 216
formulation ......................................................... 2
creep model
Euler............................................................... 2
CCModelACI78......................................... 216
governing equations............................................ 7
discretisation
spatial......................................................... 236
temporal ..................................................... 242
dynamic .......................................................... 265
H
heat ................................................................. 234
Heterosis element ........................... 124, 136, 143
hierarchical formulation.................................... 83
HPFRCC........................................................... 51
equibiaxial ........................................................ 56
F
fatigue............................................................... 48
integration points
288
CCIsoQuad element..................................... 90
formulation..................................................... 2
general............................................................ 2
R
Rayleigh Ritz method ..................................... 270
Q10/Q10Sbetaelement............................... 111
shape function................................................... 83
introduction ........................................................ 1
SHCC................................................................ 51
M
moisture.......................................................... 233
multiaxial........................................................ 210
Multipoint constraint ...................................... 275
nonlinearity ........................................................ 1
types............................................................... 1
strain ................................................................... 5
Almansi .......................................................... 6
engineering..................................................... 5
oscilations....................................................... 244
fracturing...................................................... 36
P
Palmgren-Miner hypothesis ............................. 49
plasticity ........................................................... 41
principle of virtual displacements .................. 3, 6
principle of virtual forces ................................... 3
problem .............................................................. 2
configuration.................................................. 3
ATENA Theory
Green Lagrange.............................................. 5
Strain Hardening Cementitious Composite ...... 51
Strain Hardening Cementitious Composites..... 51
stress ................................................................... 4
2nd Piola-Kirchhoff ....................................... 4
Cauchy ........................................................... 4
stress/strain smoothing ..................................... 10
289
lumped ......................................................... 11
variational .................................................... 11
U
uniaxial ....................... 17, 26, 39, 56, 58, 66, 116
W
Whler curve .................................................... 50
290