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Spectral extended finite element method for band structure calculations in phononic crystals

Published 15 Sep 2020 in physics.comp-ph | (2009.06913v2)

Abstract: In this paper, we compute the band structure of one- and two-dimensional phononic composites using the extended finite element method (X-FEM) on structured higher-order (spectral) finite element meshes. On using partition-of-unity enrichment in finite element analysis, the X-FEM permits use of structured finite element meshes that do not conform to the geometry of holes and inclusions. This eliminates the need for remeshing in phononic shape optimization and topology optimization studies. In two dimensions, we adopt rational B{\'e}zier representation of curved (circular) geometries, and construct suitable material enrichment functions to model two-phase composites. A Bloch-formulation of the elastodynamic phononic eigenproblem is adopted. Efficient computation of weak form integrals with polynomial integrands is realized via the homogeneous numerical integration scheme -- a method that uses Euler's homogeneous function theorem and Stokes's theorem to reduce integration to the boundary of the domain. Ghost penalty stabilization is used on finite elements that are cut by a hole. Band structure calculations on perforated (circular holes, elliptical holes, and holes defined as a level set) materials as well as on two-phase phononic crystals are presented that affirm the sound accuracy and optimal convergence of the method on structured, higher-order spectral finite element meshes. Several numerical examples demonstrate the advantages of $p$-refinement made possible by the spectral extended finite element method. In these examples, fourth-order spectral extended finite elements deliver $\mathcal{O}(10{-8})$ accuracy in frequency calculations with more than thirty-fold fewer degrees-of-freedom when compared to quadratic finite elements.

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