Interface reduction on hurty/craig-bampton substructures with frictionless contact

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Abstract

Contact in structures with mechanical interfaces has the ability to significantly influence the system dynamics, such that the energy dissipation and resonant frequencies vary as a function of the response amplitude. Finite element analysis is commonly used to study the physics of such problems, particularly when examining the local behavior at the interfaces. These high fidelity, nonlinear models are computationally expensive to run with time-stepping solvers due to their large mesh densities at the interface, and because of the high expense required to update the tangent operators. Hurty/Craig-Bampton substructuring and interface reduction techniques are commonly utilized to reduce computation time for jointed structures. In the past, these methods have only been applied to substructures rigidly attached to one another, resulting in a linear model. The present work explores the performance of a particular interface reduction technique (system-level characteristic constraint modes) on a nonlinear model with node-to-node contact for a benchmark structure consisting of two c-shape beams bolted together at each end.

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Hughes, P. J., Scott, W., Wu, W., Kuether, R. J., Allen, M. S., & Tiso, P. (2019). Interface reduction on hurty/craig-bampton substructures with frictionless contact. In Conference Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Mechanics Series (Vol. 1, pp. 1–16). Springer Science and Business Media, LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-74280-9_1

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