ISOGEOMETRIC ANALYSIS: APPROXIMATION, STABILITY AND ERROR ESTIMATES FOR h-REFINED MESHES
Top Cited Papers
- 1 July 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd in Mathematical Models and Methods in Applied Sciences
- Vol. 16 (07) , 1031-1090
- https://doi.org/10.1142/s0218202506001455
Abstract
We begin the mathematical study of Isogeometric Analysis based on NURBS (non-uniform rational B-splines). Isogeometric Analysis is a generalization of classical Finite Element Analysis (FEA) which possesses improved properties. For example, NURBS are capable of more precise geometric representation of complex objects and, in particular, can exactly represent many commonly engineered shapes, such as cylinders, spheres and tori. Isogeometric Analysis also simplifies mesh refinement because the geometry is fixed at the coarsest level of refinement and is unchanged throughout the refinement process. This eliminates geometrical errors and the necessity of linking the refinement procedure to a CAD representation of the geometry, as in classical FEA. In this work we study approximation and stability properties in the context of h-refinement. We develop approximation estimates based on a new Bramble–Hilbert lemma in so-called "bent" Sobolev spaces appropriate for NURBS approximations and establish inverse estimates similar to those for finite elements. We apply the theoretical results to several cases of interest including elasticity, isotropic incompressible elasticity and Stokes flow, and advection-diffusion, and perform numerical tests which corroborate the mathematical results. We also perform numerical calculations that involve hypotheses outside our theory and these suggest that there are many other interesting mathematical properties of Isogeometric Analysis yet to be proved.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- An analysis of some mixed-enhanced finite element for plane linear elasticityComputer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 2005
- Stabilized methods and post-processing techniques for miscible displacementsComputer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 2004
- A variational multiscale method for the large eddy simulation of compressible turbulent flows on unstructured meshes––application to vortex sheddingComputer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 2004
- A three-level finite element method for the instationary incompressible Navier–Stokes equationsComputer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 2004
- A DiscontinuoushpFinite Element Method for Diffusion ProblemsJournal of Computational Physics, 1998
- Stabilized finite element methods: I. Application to the advective-diffusive modelComputer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 1992
- Error analysis of some finite element methods for the Stokes problemMathematics of Computation, 1990
- An absolutely stabilized finite element method for the Stokes problemMathematics of Computation, 1989
- A new finite element formulation for computational fluid dynamics: V. Circumventing the babuška-brezzi condition: a stable Petrov-Galerkin formulation of the stokes problem accommodating equal-order interpolationsComputer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 1986
- Interpolation theory over curved elements, with applications to finite element methodsComputer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, 1972