No Arabic abstract
This work is motivated by the difficulty in assembling the Galerkin matrix when solving Partial Differential Equations (PDEs) with Isogeometric Analysis (IGA) using B-splines of moderate-to-high polynomial degree. To mitigate this problem, we propose a novel methodology named CossIGA (COmpreSSive IsoGeometric Analysis), which combines the IGA principle with CORSING, a recently introduced sparse recovery approach for PDEs based on compressive sensing. CossIGA assembles only a small portion of a suitable IGA Petrov-Galerkin discretization and is effective whenever the PDE solution is sufficiently sparse or compressible, i.e., when most of its coefficients are zero or negligible. The sparsity of the solution is promoted by employing a multilevel dictionary of B-splines as opposed to a basis. Thanks to sparsity and the fact that only a fraction of the full discretization matrix is assembled, the proposed technique has the potential to lead to significant computational savings. We show the effectiveness of CossIGA for the solution of the 2D and 3D Poisson equation over nontrivial geometries by means of an extensive numerical investigation.
In this article, we discuss the numerical solution of diffusion equations on random surfaces within the isogeometric framework. Complex computational geometries, given only by surface triangulations, are recast into the isogeometric context by transforming them into quadrangulations and a subsequent interpolation procedure. Moreover, we describe in detail, how diffusion problems on random surfaces can be modelled and how quantities of interest may be derived. In particular, we propose a low rank approximation algorithm for the high-dimensional space-time correlation of the random solution. Extensive numerical studies are provided to quantify and validate the approach.
The fast assembling of stiffness and mass matrices is a key issue in isogeometric analysis, particularly if the spline degree is increased. We present two algorithms based on the idea of sum factorization, one for matrix assembling and one for matrix-free methods, and study the behavior of their computational complexity in terms of the spline order $p$. Opposed to the standard approach, these algorithms do not apply the idea element-wise, but globally or on macro-elements. If this approach is applied to Gauss quadrature, the computational complexity grows as $p^{d+2}$ instead of $p^{2d+1}$ as previously achieved.
We investigate the isogeometric analysis for surface PDEs based on the extended Loop subdivision approach. The basis functions consisting of quartic box-splines corresponding to each subdivided control mesh are utilized to represent the geometry exactly, and construct the solution space for dependent variables as well, which is consistent with the concept of isogeometric analysis. The subdivision process is equivalent to the $h$-refinement of NURBS-based isogeometric analysis. The performance of the proposed method is evaluated by solving various surface PDEs, such as surface Laplace-Beltrami harmonic/biharmonic/triharmonic equations, which are defined on different limit surfaces of the extended Loop subdivision for different initial control meshes. Numerical experiments demonstrate that the proposed method has desirable performance in terms of the accuracy, convergence and computational cost for solving the above surface PDEs defined on both open and closed surfaces. The proposed approach is proved to be second-order accuracy in the sense of $L^2$-norm by theoretical and/or numerical results, which is also outperformed over the standard linear finite element by several numerical comparisons.
We present algebraic multilevel iteration (AMLI) methods for isogeometric discretization of scalar second order elliptic problems. The construction of coarse grid operators and hierarchical complementary operators are given. Moreover, for a uniform mesh on a unit interval, the explicit representation of B-spline basis functions for a fixed mesh size $h$ is given for $p=2,3,4$ and for $C^{0}$- and $C^{p-1}$-continuity. The presented methods show $h$- and (almost) $p$-independent convergence rates. Supporting numerical results for convergence factor and iterations count for AMLI cycles ($V$-, linear $W$-, nonlinear $W$-) are provided. Numerical tests are performed, in two-dimensions on square domain and quarter annulus, and in three-dimensions on quarter thick ring.
We introduce a coupled finite and boundary element formulation for acoustic scattering analysis over thin shell structures. A triangular Loop subdivision surface discretisation is used for both geometry and analysis fields. The Kirchhoff-Love shell equation is discretised with the finite element method and the Helmholtz equation for the acoustic field with the boundary element method. The use of the boundary element formulation allows the elegant handling of infinite domains and precludes the need for volumetric meshing. In the present work the subdivision control meshes for the shell displacements and the acoustic pressures have the same resolution. The corresponding smooth subdivision basis functions have the $C^1$ continuity property required for the Kirchhoff-Love formulation and are highly efficient for the acoustic field computations. We validate the proposed isogeometric formulation through a closed-form solution of acoustic scattering over a thin shell sphere. Furthermore, we demonstrate the ability of the proposed approach to handle complex geometries with arbitrary topology that provides an integrated isogeometric design and analysis workflow for coupled structural-acoustic analysis of shells.