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Document type:
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Author(s):
Grill, Maximilian J.; Wall, Wolfgang A.; Meier, Christoph
Title:
A computational model for molecular interactions between curved slender fibers undergoing large 3D deformations with a focus on electrostatic, van der Waals, and repulsive steric forces
Abstract:
This contribution proposes the first three-dimensional (3D) beam-beam interaction model for molecular interactions between curved slender fibers undergoing large deformations. While the general model is not restricted to a specific beam formulation, in the present work, it is combined with the geometrically exact beam theory and discretized via the finite element method. A direct evaluation of the total interaction potential for general 3D bodies requires the integration of contributions from molecule or charge distributions over the volumes of the interaction partners, leading to a six-dimensional integral (two nested 3D integrals) that has to be solved numerically. Here, we propose a novel strategy to formulate reduced section-section interaction laws for the resultant interaction potential between a pair of cross-sections of two slender fibers such that only two one-dimensional integrals along the fibers' length directions have to be solved numerically. This section-section interaction potential (SSIP) approach yields a significant gain in efficiency, which is essential to enable the simulation of relevant time and length scales for many practical applications. In a first step, the generic structure of SSIP laws, which is suitable for the most general interaction scenario (eg, fibers with arbitrary cross-section shape and inhomogeneous atomic/charge density within the cross-section) is presented. Assuming circular, homogeneous cross-sections, in a next step, specific analytical expressions for SSIP laws describing short-range volume interactions (eg, van der Waals (vdW) or steric interactions) and long-range surface interactions (eg, Coulomb interactions) are proposed. Besides ready-to-use expressions for the total interaction potential, also the resulting virtual work contributions, its finite element discretizations, as well as a suitable numerical regularization for the limit of zero separation are derived. The validity of the SSIP laws, as well as the accuracy and robustness of the general SSIP approach to beam-beam interactions, is thoroughly verified by means of a set of numerical examples considering steric repulsion, electrostatic, or vdW adhesion. © 2020 The Authors. International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Dewey Decimal Classification:
620 Ingenieurwissenschaften
Journal title:
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering
Year:
2020
Journal volume:
Volume 121
Year / month:
2020-05
Pages contribution:
Pages 2285-2330
Covered by:
Scopus; Web of Science
Fulltext / DOI:
doi:10.1002/nme.6309
WWW:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/nme.6309
Publisher:
Wiley
E-ISSN:
0029-59811097-0207
Status:
Verlagsversion / published
Date of publication:
30.05.2020
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