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Geomecánica con el método de elementos de contorno (BEM)×Método de las Tiras Finitas×Interacción Suelo-Estructura×
CampoIngeniería civilIngeniería civilIngeniería civil
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen197819761974
Autor originalCarlos Alberto BrebbiaY. K. CheungArtur S. Veletsos
TipoMesh-less numerical method for geomechanical problemsReduced-dimension numerical method for prismatic structuresDynamic analysis of coupled soil-foundation-structure systems
Fuente seminalBrebbia, C. A. (1978). The Boundary Element Method for Engineers. Pentech Press. ISBN: 0-08-020191-5Cheung, Y. K. (1976). Finite Strip Method in Structural Analysis. Pergamon Press. ISBN: 0-08-020191-5Veletsos, A. S., & Meek, J. W. (1974). Dynamic behaviour of building-foundation systems. Earthquake Engineering & Structural Dynamics, 3(2), 121-138. DOI ↗
AliasBoundary element method, BEM analysis, Indirect methodsFSM, Strip method, Semi-analytical finite elementSSI analysis, Foundation compliance, Dynamic foundation analysis
Relacionados334
ResumenThe boundary element method (BEM) for geomechanics is a numerical approach that solves problems by discretizing only the boundary of the domain, using analytical solutions for the interior. Introduced by Brebbia in 1978 and refined for geotechnical applications by Crouch and Starfield, BEM is particularly effective for infinite or semi-infinite domains (underground excavations, foundations, rock masses) where finite element methods are impractical.The finite strip method (FSM) is a semi-analytical numerical approach for analyzing prismatic or cylindrical structures by dividing them into strips in one direction and using analytical or exact solutions in the perpendicular direction. Developed by Cheung in 1976, FSM reduces computational cost and often provides superior accuracy for structures with regular geometry along one axis.Soil-structure interaction (SSI) analysis accounts for the dynamic coupling between a structure and its supporting foundation soil, recognizing that the soil is not infinitely rigid. Formalized by Veletsos in 1974, this approach reveals how foundation compliance, radiation damping, and kinematic effects modify the structure's seismic response compared to fixed-base assumptions.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: BEM Geomechanics · Finite Strip Method · Soil-Structure Interaction. Recuperado el 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare