Elsevier

MethodsX

Volume 9, 2022, 101688
MethodsX

Method Article
Contacts with limited interpenetration

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mex.2022.101688Get rights and content
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Abstract

The aim of this paper is to acquaint a wider public of applied mathematicians, numerical analysts and engineers with the model of contact with limited interpenetration as a suitable framework for computation of practical problems. It is mostly based on the newly published Ref. [5]. The model is physically well based on the microscopic structure of a standard material of a body being in an actual or potential contact with a rigid foundation. Such microscopic phenomena are macroscopically interpreted as a certain but strictly limited surface interpenetration of both objects. The essence of this interpenetration is depicted in the graphical abstract. After a brief description of its motivation and the method itself, a comparison with the other contact models available together with the detailed description of the graphical abstract is presented. Furthermore, the application of the method to a quasistatic frictional boundary contact is described. Moreover, a brief description of the methods used in the proof of the existence of solutions of such contact problems is provided. If the depth of the interpenetration tends to zero, then there is some sequence of solutions of such problems and some solution to the corresponding Signorini contact problem such that it is the limit of the sequence. Requirements for the use of the presented model in solving practical problems as well as its other aspects are briefly discussed. Summing up:

  • the presented and other results published (Refs. [1], [2], [3], [4]) create a reliable basis of the numerical analysis of the problems;

  • the method is ready to be used in solving a wide class of contact problems arising in technical practice.

Keywords

Limited interpenetration
Quasistatic contact problems
Coulomb friction
Approximate problems
Existence of solutions
Relation to the Signorini contact

Method name

Contact with limited interpenetration.

Cited by (0)

Direct Submission or Co-Submission: Co-submissions are papers that have been submitted alongside an original research paper accepted for publication by another Elsevier journal. Cf. Ref. [5].

Co-Submission