Eighty Years of the Finite Element Method: Birth, Evolution, and Future
Wing Kam Liu, Shaofan Li, Harold Park

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive historical overview of the finite element method's development over eighty years, highlighting its evolution, applications, and future directions across various engineering and scientific fields.
Contribution
It offers a detailed historical perspective on FEM's development, focusing on its applications in solid mechanics and related fields, and discusses recent advancements and future prospects.
Findings
FEM revolutionized scientific modeling and engineering design.
Development of computational mechanics as a discipline.
Recent advancements focus on large-scale industrial applications.
Abstract
This year marks the eightieth anniversary of the invention of the finite element method (FEM). FEM has become the computational workhorse for engineering design analysis and scientific modeling of a wide range of physical processes, including material and structural mechanics, fluid flow and heat conduction, various biological processes for medical diagnosis and surgery planning, electromagnetics and semi-conductor circuit and chip design and analysis, additive manufacturing, i.e. virtually every conceivable problem that can be described by partial differential equations (PDEs). FEM has fundamentally revolutionized the way we do scientific modeling and engineering design, ranging from automobiles, aircraft, marine structures, bridges, highways, and high-rise buildings. Associated with the development of finite element methods has been the concurrent development of an engineering science…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Numerical Methods in Computational Mathematics · Innovations in Concrete and Construction Materials · Topology Optimization in Engineering
