Abstract

We introduce a boundary penalization technique to improve the spectral approximation of isogeometric analysis (IGA). The method removes the outliers appearing in the high-frequency region of the approximate spectrum when using the Cp−1,p-th (p≥3) order isogeometric elements. We focus on the classical Laplacian (Dirichlet) eigenvalue problem in 1D to illustrate the idea and then use the tensor-product structure to generate the stiffness and mass matrices for multidimensional problems. To remove the outliers, we penalize the higher-order derivatives from both the solution and test spaces at the domain boundary. Intuitively, we construct a better approximation by weakly imposing features of the exact solution. Effectively, we add terms to the variational formulation at the boundaries with minimal extra-computational cost. We then generalize the idea to remove the outliers for the isogeometric analysis of the Neumann eigenvalue problem (for p≥2). The boundary penalization does not change the test and solution spaces. In the limiting case, when the penalty goes to infinity, we perform the dispersion analysis of C2 cubic elements for the Dirichlet eigenvalue problem and C1 quadratic elements for the Neumann eigenvalue problem. We obtain the analytical eigenpairs for the resulting matrix eigenvalue problems. Numerical experiments show optimal convergence rates for the eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of the discrete operator.

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