A Fourier-series-based virtual fields method for the identification of 2-D stiffness distributions
A Fourier-series-based virtual fields method for the identification of 2-D stiffness distributions
The virtual fields method (VFM) is a powerful technique for the calculation of spatial distributions of material properties from experimentally determined displacement fields. A Fourier-series-based extension to the VFM (the F-VFM) is presented here, in which the unknown stiffness distribution is parameterised in the spatial frequency domain rather than in the spatial domain as used in the classical VFM. We present in this paper the theory of the F-VFM for the case of elastic isotropic thin structures with known boundary conditions. An efficient numerical algorithm based on the two-dimensional Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) is presented, which reduces the computation time by three to four orders of magnitude compared with a direct implementation of the F-VFM for typical experimental dataset sizes. Artefacts specific to the F-VFM (ringing at the highest spatial frequency near to modulus discontinuities) can be largely removed through the use of appropriate filtering strategies. Reconstruction of stiffness distributions with the F-VFM has been validated on three stiffness distribution scenarios under varying levels of noise in the input displacement fields. Robust reconstructions are achieved even when the displacement noise is higher than in typical experimental fields
917-936
Nguyen, T.T.
e1571bf6-a5d9-4110-a429-33e280558956
Huntley, J.M.
37aa5375-200e-4128-a7e5-a2c20e0b6193
Ashcroft, I.A.
de3bf130-035f-4990-b631-a46ce23d302d
Ruiz, P.D.
ea552047-ae33-4b78-89d2-6260a5bde2d3
Pierron, F.
a1fb4a70-6f34-4625-bc23-fcb6996b79b4
22 June 2014
Nguyen, T.T.
e1571bf6-a5d9-4110-a429-33e280558956
Huntley, J.M.
37aa5375-200e-4128-a7e5-a2c20e0b6193
Ashcroft, I.A.
de3bf130-035f-4990-b631-a46ce23d302d
Ruiz, P.D.
ea552047-ae33-4b78-89d2-6260a5bde2d3
Pierron, F.
a1fb4a70-6f34-4625-bc23-fcb6996b79b4
Nguyen, T.T., Huntley, J.M., Ashcroft, I.A., Ruiz, P.D. and Pierron, F.
(2014)
A Fourier-series-based virtual fields method for the identification of 2-D stiffness distributions.
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering, 98 (12), .
(doi:10.1002/nme.4665).
Abstract
The virtual fields method (VFM) is a powerful technique for the calculation of spatial distributions of material properties from experimentally determined displacement fields. A Fourier-series-based extension to the VFM (the F-VFM) is presented here, in which the unknown stiffness distribution is parameterised in the spatial frequency domain rather than in the spatial domain as used in the classical VFM. We present in this paper the theory of the F-VFM for the case of elastic isotropic thin structures with known boundary conditions. An efficient numerical algorithm based on the two-dimensional Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) is presented, which reduces the computation time by three to four orders of magnitude compared with a direct implementation of the F-VFM for typical experimental dataset sizes. Artefacts specific to the F-VFM (ringing at the highest spatial frequency near to modulus discontinuities) can be largely removed through the use of appropriate filtering strategies. Reconstruction of stiffness distributions with the F-VFM has been validated on three stiffness distribution scenarios under varying levels of noise in the input displacement fields. Robust reconstructions are achieved even when the displacement noise is higher than in typical experimental fields
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 22 June 2014
Organisations:
Engineering Mats & Surface Engineerg Gp
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 367369
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/367369
ISSN: 0029-5981
PURE UUID: 6693f5fd-e152-438d-a80f-cce79a7b4153
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 22 Aug 2014 14:29
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:35
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
T.T. Nguyen
Author:
J.M. Huntley
Author:
I.A. Ashcroft
Author:
P.D. Ruiz
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics