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Compară metode

Examinează metodele selectate una lângă alta; rândurile care diferă sunt evidențiate.

Metoda benzilor finite×Geomecanică prin metoda elementelor de contur (BEM)×Analiza Dinamică Incrementală×
DomeniuInginerie civilăInginerie civilăInginerie civilă
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Anul apariției197619782002
Autorul originalY. K. CheungCarlos Alberto BrebbiaDimitrios Vamvatsikos and C. Allin Cornell
TipReduced-dimension numerical method for prismatic structuresMesh-less numerical method for geomechanical problemsIntensity-based dynamic analysis for fragility assessment
Sursa seminalăCheung, Y. K. (1976). Finite Strip Method in Structural Analysis. Pergamon Press. ISBN: 0-08-020191-5Brebbia, C. A. (1978). The Boundary Element Method for Engineers. Pentech Press. ISBN: 0-08-020191-5Vamvatsikos, D., & Cornell, C. A. (2002). Incremental dynamic analysis of seismic performance of structures. Earthquake Engineering & Structural Dynamics, 31(3), 491-514. DOI ↗
Denumiri alternativeFSM, Strip method, Semi-analytical finite elementBoundary element method, BEM analysis, Indirect methodsIDA, Intensity-based analysis, Fragility curve development
Înrudite333
RezumatThe 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.The 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.Incremental dynamic analysis (IDA) is a method that runs time-history analyses on a structure with a single ground motion record, progressively increasing the intensity until the structure reaches a specified performance level or collapses. Introduced by Vamvatsikos and Cornell in 2002, this approach efficiently generates fragility curves relating earthquake intensity to structural damage and collapse probability.
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ScholarGateCompară metode: Finite Strip Method · BEM Geomechanics · Incremental Dynamic Analysis. Preluat la 2026-06-18 de pe https://scholargate.app/ro/compare