Eulerian framework for contact between solids represented as phase fields
Flavio Lorez, Mohit Pundir, David S. Kammer

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel Eulerian phase-field finite element framework for modeling contact between elastic solids with evolving boundaries, simplifying contact detection and resolution in complex, dynamic systems.
Contribution
It presents a new volumetric contact constraint based on penalty forces within an Eulerian phase-field approach, enabling efficient and accurate modeling of evolving solid-solid contact.
Findings
Successfully captures complex solid-solid interactions
Simplifies contact detection and resolution
Can be coupled with other physical phenomena
Abstract
Mechanical contact between solids is almost exclusively modeled in Lagrangian frameworks. While these frameworks have been developed extensively and applied successfully to numerous contact problems, they generally require complex algorithms for contact detection and resolution. These challenges become particularly important when contact appears between solids with evolving boundaries, such as in systems where crystals grow in a constrained space. In this work, we introduce a fully Eulerian finite element framework for modeling contact between elastic solids tailored towards problems including evolving and intricate surfaces. The proposed approach uses a phase-field method that involves a diffuse representation of geometries on a fixed mesh, simplifying the modeling of evolving surfaces. Our methodology introduces a novel volumetric contact constraint based on penalty body forces,…
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