13 research outputs found

    Computational modeling and wave propagation in media with inelastic deforming microstructure

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    A phenomenological continuum model for computational use has been developed to describe large amplitude transient wave propagation in heterogeneous multi-component materials. A key feature of the model is a physics-based treatment of the continuum response of microstructural components with markedly dissimilar elasticity and strength properties. A fundamental premise of the modeling effort is reliance solely on widely available dynamic material property data including Hugoniot equation-of-state and Hopkinson pressure bar strength data through either direct application or physically plausible theories. Average nonlinear iso-pressure and iso-strain solutions provide bounding responses of the multi-component material. Compressive deformation under pressure and concomitant dissipation is treated through methods of irreversible phase transformation. The model has been incorporated into a multidimensional Eulerian finite-difference shock physics code and used to examine the response of selected materials to dynamic loads

    Numerical Methods for the Bidomain and Reduced Models

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    Mathematical Models of Cellular Bioelectrical Activity

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    Mathematical Models of Cardiac Cells Arrangements: The Bidomain Model

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    Basic Cardiac Anatomy and Electrocardiology

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    Reduced Macroscopic Models: The Monodomain and Eikonal Models

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    The Inverse Problem of Electrocardiology

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