scholarly journals Total Potential Optimization Using Metaheuristic Algorithms for Solving Nonlinear Plane Strain Systems

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 3220
Author(s):  
Yusuf Cengiz Toklu ◽  
Gebrail Bekdaş ◽  
Melda Yücel ◽  
Sinan Melih Nigdeli ◽  
Aylin Ece Kayabekir ◽  
...  

Total Potential Optimization using Metaheuristic Algorithms (TPO/MA) is an alternative tool for the analysis of structures. It is shown that this emerging method is advantageous in solving nonlinear problems like trusses, tensegrity structures, cable networks, and plane stress systems. In the present study, TPO/MA, which does not need any specific implementation for nonlinearity, is demonstrated to be successfully applied to the analysis of plane strain structures. A numerical investigation is performed using nine different metaheuristic algorithms and an adaptive harmony search in linear analysis of a structural mechanics problem having 8 free nodes defined as design variables in the minimization problem of total potential energy. For nonlinear stress-strain relation cases, two structural mechanics problems, one being a thick-walled pipe and the other being a cantilever retaining wall, are analyzed by employing adaptive harmony search, which was found to be the best one in linear analyses. The nonlinear stress-strain relations considered in these analyses are hypothetical ones due to the lack of any such relationship in the literature. The results have shown that TPO/MA can solve nonlinear plane strain problems that can be encountered as engineering problems in structural mechanics.

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 2301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aylin Ece Kayabekir ◽  
Yusuf Cengiz Toklu ◽  
Gebrail Bekdaş ◽  
Sinan Melih Nigdeli ◽  
Melda Yücel ◽  
...  

By finding the minimum total potential energy of a structural system with a defined degree of freedoms assigned as design variables, it is possible to find the equilibrium condition of the deformed system. This method, called total potential optimization using metaheuristic algorithms (TPO/MA), has been verified on truss and truss-like structures, such as cable systems and tensegric structures. Harmony Search (HS) algorithm methods perfectly found the analysis results of the previous structure types. In this study, TPO/MA is presented for analysis of plates for plane stress members to solve general types of problems. Due to the complex nature of the system, a novel hybrid Harmony Search (HHS) approach was proposed. HHS is the hybridization of local search phases of HS and the global search phase of the Flower Pollination Algorithm (FPA). The results found via HHS were verified with the finite element method (FEM). When compared with classical HS, HHS provides smaller total potential energy values, and needs less iterations than other new generation metaheuristic algorithms.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Baggioli ◽  
Víctor Cáncer Castillo ◽  
Oriol Pujolàs

Abstract We discuss the nonlinear elastic response in scale invariant solids. Following previous work, we split the analysis into two basic options: according to whether scale invariance (SI) is a manifest or a spontaneously broken symmetry. In the latter case, one can employ effective field theory methods, whereas in the former we use holographic methods. We focus on a simple class of holographic models that exhibit elastic behaviour, and obtain their nonlinear stress-strain curves as well as an estimate of the elasticity bounds — the maximum possible deformation in the elastic (reversible) regime. The bounds differ substantially in the manifest or spontaneously broken SI cases, even when the same stress- strain curve is assumed in both cases. Additionally, the hyper-elastic subset of models (that allow for large deformations) is found to have stress-strain curves akin to natural rubber. The holographic instances in this category, which we dub black rubber, display richer stress- strain curves — with two different power-law regimes at different magnitudes of the strain.


1985 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 830-856 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Cembrola ◽  
T. J. Dudek

Abstract Recent developments in nonlinear finite element methods (FEM) and mechanics of composite materials have made it possible to handle complex tire mechanics problems involving large deformations and moderate strains. The development of an accurate material model for cord/rubber composites is a necessary requirement for the application of these powerful finite element programs to practical problems but involves numerous complexities. Difficulties associated with the application of classical lamination theory to cord/rubber composites were reviewed. The complexity of the material characterization of cord/rubber composites by experimental means was also discussed. This complexity arises from the highly anisotropic properties of twisted cords and the nonlinear stress—strain behavior of the laminates. Micromechanics theories, which have been successfully applied to hard composites (i.e., graphite—epoxy) have been shown to be inadequate in predicting some of the properties of the calendered fabric ply material from the properties of the cord and rubber. Finite element models which include an interply rubber layer to account for the interlaminar shear have been shown to give a better representation of cord/rubber laminate behavior in tension and bending. The application of finite element analysis to more refined models of complex structures like tires, however, requires the development of a more realistic material model which would account for the nonlinear stress—strain properties of cord/rubber composites.


2013 ◽  
Vol 631-632 ◽  
pp. 782-788
Author(s):  
Cheng Chen ◽  
Zheng Ming Zhou

Soils have nonlinear stiffness and develops irrecoverable strains even at very small strain levels. Accurate modeling of stress-strain behaviour at various strain levels is very important for predicting the deformation of soils. Some existing stress-strain models are reviewed and evaluated firstly. And then a new simple non-linear stress-strain model is proposed. Four undetermined parameters involved in the proposed model can be obtained through maximum Young’s module, deformation module, and limit deviator stress and linearity index of soils that can be measured from experiment directly or calculated by empirical formulas indirectly. The effectiveness of the proposed stress-strain model is examined by predicting stress-strain curves measured in plane-strain compression test on Toyota sand and undrained triaxial compression test on London clay. The fitting results of the proposed model are in good agreement with experimental data, which verify the effectiveness of the model.


1994 ◽  
Vol 33 (Part 1, No. 9B) ◽  
pp. 5341-5344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshio Tanimoto ◽  
Kohji Yamamoto ◽  
Tohru Morii

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