events

***Video available**** Severo Ochoa Seminar - "Recent Advances on the Shifted Boundary", by Guglielmo Scovazzi

Published: 18/01/2023

14th June, 2023. Time: 12 noon

Hybrid / O.C. Zienkiewicz Conference Room, C1 Building, UPC Campus Nord, Barcelona

Link for online session


ABSTRACT

Embedded/immersed/unfitted  boundary methods obviate the need for continual re-meshing in many applications involving rapid prototyping and design. Unfortunately, many finite element embedded boundary methods (cutFEM, Finite Cell Method, etc. ) are also difficult to implement due to: (a) the need to perform complex cell cutting operations at boundaries, (b) the necessity of specialized quadrature formulas, and (c) the consequences that these operations may have on the overall conditioning/stability of the ensuing algebraic problems.

We present a new, stable, and simple embedded boundary method, named "Shifted Boundary Method" (SBM), which eliminates the need to perform cell cutting. Boundary conditions are imposed on a surrogate discrete boundary, lying on the interior of the true boundary interface. We then construct appropriate field extension operators by way of Taylor expansions, with the purpose of preserving accuracy when imposing the boundary conditions. We demonstrate the SBM in applications involving solid and fracture mechanics; thermomechanics; CFD and porous media flow problems.

In particular this talk will present recently published and unpublished work  on penalty-free formulations for boundary value problems, simplified data structures/ variational formulations for fracture mechanics, extension operators alternative to Taylor expansions for the imposition of boundary conditions. Part of this work has been accomplished in a number of collaborations with CIMNE and UPC.

SPEAKER CV

Guglielmo ScovazziGuglielmo Scovazzi is a Professor of Civil & Environmental Engineering and Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science at Duke University. His interests are in the general area of computational mechanics, and specifically in CFD, computational solid mechanics, fluid/structure interaction, computational geomechanics, flow through porous media. 

He earned B.S./M.S. Degrees in Aerospace Engineering at Politecnico di Torino in 1998. He received a M.S. in 2001 and a Ph.D. in 2004, both from the Mechanical Engineering Department at Stanford University. Between 2004 and 2012, he held a position as Senior Member of the Technical Staff at Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque (New Mexico).

Guglielmo Scovazzi is a recipient of the 2014 Early Career Award from the Office of Science of the US Department Of Energy (ASCR program), and the 2017 Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE). In February 2018, he was named Kavli Fellow by the National Academy of Sciences and the Kavli Foundation. The Kavli Fellowship acknowledges contributions of U.S. scientists under the age of 45. He was also named Distinguished Adjunct Professor at POSTECH (Pohang University of Science and Technology, South Korea).

He is an associate editor of the "Journal of Computational Physics" (Elsevier) and "Computational Geosciences" (Springer) and in the editorial board of "Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering" journal (Elsevier), the "International Journal on Numerical Methods for Fluids," (Wiley) the "Engineering with Computers" journal (Springer), and the "Advances in Computational Science and Engineering" journal (American Institute of Mathematical Sciences). He is a member of IACM, SIAM, USACM, ASCE, and ASME.


Seminar Programme 2023