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arxiv: 2605.04573 · v1 · submitted 2026-05-06 · 🧮 math.NA · cs.NA

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Mixed Finite Elements for Geometrically Exact Beams using Discontinuous Rotations and Discrete Curvature

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Pith reviewed 2026-05-08 16:15 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.NA cs.NA
keywords mixed finite elementsgeometrically exact beamsSimo-Reissner beamsdiscontinuous rotationsdiscrete curvaturefinite element formulation
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The pith

A mixed finite-element formulation for geometrically exact beams treats moments as independent variables to allow discontinuous rotations per element.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper develops a mixed finite element method for Simo-Reissner beams that introduces the moment vector as an additional independent field. This choice permits rotations to be approximated discontinuously inside each element, which simplifies the overall discretization. The concept of discrete curvature ensures mathematical consistency when rotations are allowed to jump at element interfaces. For linear constitutive laws the formulation is obtained via a Legendre transform of the curvature energy, and the total Lagrangian setting with multiplicative relative-rotation interpolation preserves objectivity and path independence. Numerical benchmarks confirm optimal convergence rates that hold irrespective of beam slenderness or polynomial degree, including the special case of element-wise constant rotations.

Core claim

The central claim is that a mixed variational formulation for geometrically exact beams, obtained by introducing the moment vector as an independent field, enables an element-local discontinuous approximation of rotations while remaining consistent through the notion of discrete curvature. Objectivity is retained by interpolating relative rotations via a multiplicative split, and path independence follows directly from the total Lagrangian description.

What carries the argument

mixed variational principle with moment vector as independent field and discrete curvature to accommodate discontinuous rotations

Load-bearing premise

The Legendre transform of the curvature strain energy produces a stable and consistent discrete system for every slenderness ratio and every element order.

What would settle it

A benchmark computation on a highly slender beam with the lowest-order element that exhibits locking or suboptimal convergence rates would falsify the claims.

read the original abstract

We propose a novel mixed finite-element formulation for geometrically exact (Simo--Reissner) beams that introduces the moment vector as additional independent field. The specific mixed form allows for an element-local, discontinuous approximation of rotations, which is key to a simple and efficient discretization framework. The concept of discrete curvature provides a mathematically consistent treatment of rotation discontinuities. For linear constitutive laws, the mixed form is derived via a Legendre transform of the curvature-related strain energy. Objectivity is retained at the discrete level by interpolating relative rotations through a multiplicative split of the rotation field; path-independence is inherent to the total Lagrangian setting and verified numerically. Several benchmarks demonstrate optimal rates of convergence and accuracy, irrespective of the beam's slenderness and order of approximation. Notably, the lowest-order element entirely avoids rotation interpolation by employing element-constant rotations only.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript proposes a novel mixed finite-element formulation for geometrically exact Simo-Reissner beams. It introduces the moment vector as an independent field, derived for linear constitutive laws via a Legendre transform of the curvature strain energy. This enables element-local discontinuous rotation approximations, with discrete curvature providing consistent treatment of rotation jumps. Objectivity is retained via multiplicative interpolation of relative rotations, and the total Lagrangian setting ensures path-independence. Numerical benchmarks are presented to demonstrate optimal convergence rates independent of beam slenderness and polynomial order, including a lowest-order element with element-constant rotations only.

Significance. If the stability and convergence properties hold as indicated by the benchmarks, the formulation would offer a practical simplification for discretizing geometrically exact beams by avoiding continuous rotation fields and associated interpolation complexities. The approach could be particularly useful for slender beams and varying element orders. The paper credits the total Lagrangian framework and multiplicative split for preserving key properties, and the numerical evidence for optimal rates across slenderness is a positive aspect, though the lack of supporting analysis limits the strength of the claims.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract and formulation derivation] The central claim that the method achieves optimal convergence 'irrespective of the beam's slenderness and order of approximation' rests on numerical benchmarks, but the mixed formulation obtained via Legendre transform lacks an explicit discrete inf-sup condition or uniform stability estimate. This is load-bearing for the assertion of robustness in the slender limit and for arbitrary orders, as the discontinuous rotations and discrete curvature are introduced precisely to enable the mixed form.
  2. [Numerical benchmarks] The lowest-order element, which employs element-constant rotations only, is highlighted as avoiding rotation interpolation; however, the paper does not provide a specific analysis or additional tests confirming that this element remains stable and accurate for extreme slenderness ratios without introducing locking or other pathologies.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract could more explicitly reference the specific benchmarks (e.g., number of test cases, range of slenderness ratios, and polynomial orders tested) to better support the convergence claims.
  2. Notation for the discrete curvature and the multiplicative split of the rotation field should be introduced with a brief reminder of their relation to the continuous fields to improve readability for readers unfamiliar with the Simo-Reissner model.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful and constructive review. The comments correctly identify that our convergence claims rest primarily on numerical evidence rather than a full theoretical stability analysis. We address each major comment below, indicate planned revisions, and note where we cannot provide additional analysis within the current scope.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract and formulation derivation] The central claim that the method achieves optimal convergence 'irrespective of the beam's slenderness and order of approximation' rests on numerical benchmarks, but the mixed formulation obtained via Legendre transform lacks an explicit discrete inf-sup condition or uniform stability estimate. This is load-bearing for the assertion of robustness in the slender limit and for arbitrary orders, as the discontinuous rotations and discrete curvature are introduced precisely to enable the mixed form.

    Authors: We acknowledge that the manuscript provides no discrete inf-sup condition or uniform stability estimate for the mixed formulation. The claims of optimal convergence independent of slenderness and polynomial order are supported exclusively by the numerical benchmarks in Section 5, which include multiple slenderness ratios (from thick to very slender) and approximation orders up to cubic, with the lowest-order element showing no degradation or locking. The mixed moment field and discrete curvature are introduced precisely to permit stable discontinuous rotations while preserving objectivity via multiplicative interpolation. In the revised manuscript we will (i) rephrase the abstract and introduction to state that robustness is demonstrated numerically rather than proven theoretically, and (ii) add a short discussion paragraph in the formulation section that explicitly notes the absence of an inf-sup analysis and identifies it as future work. This is a partial revision because a complete theoretical proof lies beyond the present scope. revision: partial

  2. Referee: [Numerical benchmarks] The lowest-order element, which employs element-constant rotations only, is highlighted as avoiding rotation interpolation; however, the paper does not provide a specific analysis or additional tests confirming that this element remains stable and accurate for extreme slenderness ratios without introducing locking or other pathologies.

    Authors: The lowest-order element is already included in the convergence studies of Section 5 and exhibits optimal rates across the tested slenderness range. To strengthen the evidence, the revised manuscript will contain additional targeted numerical experiments using this element at extreme slenderness ratios (L/h up to 10^6) under both bending and torsion loads. These tests will explicitly monitor for locking, spurious modes, or loss of accuracy. We therefore accept the referee's suggestion and will incorporate the new results. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: derivation rests on standard Legendre transform and total Lagrangian setting

full rationale

The core mixed weak form is obtained by applying the Legendre transform to the curvature strain energy for linear constitutive laws, then introducing the moment as independent field. This algebraic step is independent of the subsequent discrete choices (discontinuous rotations, discrete curvature) and of the numerical benchmarks. Path-independence follows directly from the total Lagrangian formulation. No self-citations are invoked as load-bearing uniqueness theorems, no fitted parameters are relabeled as predictions, and no ansatz is smuggled via prior work. The convergence rates are reported from numerical experiments rather than being presupposed by the derivation equations themselves.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 2 invented entities

The central claim rests on standard assumptions from geometrically exact beam theory and the introduction of discrete curvature and the moment field as new discretization devices; no fitted numerical parameters are mentioned.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The beam kinematics follow the Simo-Reissner geometrically exact model
    Basis for the entire formulation.
  • domain assumption Constitutive response is linear so that a Legendre transform yields the mixed form
    Explicitly required for the derivation of the mixed variational principle.
invented entities (2)
  • Moment vector as independent field no independent evidence
    purpose: To allow element-local discontinuous rotation approximation in the mixed formulation
    Introduced as an additional unknown to decouple rotations from displacements.
  • Discrete curvature no independent evidence
    purpose: To provide a mathematically consistent measure of curvature across rotation discontinuities
    New concept required to handle jumps in the rotation field.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5448 in / 1435 out tokens · 92855 ms · 2026-05-08T16:15:57.019938+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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