Robust Elasticity and Damping Models for High-Fidelity Textile Simulation
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2021
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Universidad Rey Juan Carlos
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Textiles are ubiquitous in our daily lives, being the fashion and textile industry one of
the main drivers of the global economy. Despite technological advances, the fashion
industry resists the irruption of digital design processes. The reason lies in the fact that
existing computational models found in engineering, albeit accurate, do not satisfy the
performance requirements compatible with industrial processes. Recently, advances
in computer graphics simulation methods have resulted in the development of highperformance
solutions for the simulation of fabrics at the yarn level that narrow the
accuracy gap with engineering approaches. Although current trends point towards the
emergence in the near future of high-fidelity models that will satisfy the requirements
for predictive digital prototyping, today there remain open challenges that limit the
achievement of this objective. In this thesis, we address some of these challenges and
contribute towards the creation of high fidelity simulation models.
To this end, we approach two relevant aspects for the characterization and behavior
of cloth. First, we address the modeling of dissipative behavior in cloth. We
propose a framework for the design of damping forces based on dissipation potentials
formulated as functions of strain rate. We study its application to continuum and discrete
deformation models, its practical implications, and advantages over commonly
adopted dissipation models. We demonstrate its applicability to two highly different
deformation models, Saint Venant-Kirchhoff (StVK) hyperlasticity and yarn-level cloth
with sliding persistent contacts. Then, we address the challenge of simulating multilayered
clothing. We introduce a robust method for the simulation of complex rod
assemblies and stacked layers with implicit contact handling. Previous methods fail to
robustly handle such complex situations due to ubiquitous and intrinsic degeneracies.
Our novel discretization supports accurate and efficient contact while remaining insensitive
to such degeneracies. Our solution is simple and elegant, producing robust
simulations even on large-scale scenarios with pervasive degeneracies.
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Tesis Doctoral leída en la Universidad Rey Juan Carlos de Madrid en 2021. Director de la Tesis: Miguel Ángel Otaduy
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