Abstract

AbstractWe describe an algorithm which generates tetrahedral decomposition of a general solid body, whose surface is given as a collection of triangular facets. The principal idea is to modify the constraints in such a way as to make them appear in an unconstrained triangulation of the vertex set à priori. The vertex set positions are randomized to guarantee existence of a unique triangulation which satisfies the Delaunay empty‐sphere property. (Algorithms for robust, parallelized construction of such triangulations are available.) In order to make the boundary of the solid appear as a collection of tetrahedral faces, we iterate two operations, edge flip and edge split with the insertion of additional vertex, until all of the boundary facets are present in the tetrahedral mesh. The outcome of the vertex insertion is another triangulation of the input surfaces, but one which is represented as a subset of the tetrahedral faces. To determine if a constraining facet is present in the unconstrained Delaunay triangulation of the current vertex set, we use the results of Rajan which re‐formulate Delaunay triangulation as a linear programming problem. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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