Tod A Laursen, Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Biomedical Engineering and Senior Associate Dean for Education

Tod Laursen received his Ph.D. in mechanical engineering
from Stanford University in 1992. His earlier degrees were an M.S.
from Stanford in 1989 and a B.S. from Oregon State University in
1986. Before joining the Duke faculty in 1992, Dr. Laursen worked
as a solid mechanics analyst at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
from 1986 to 1992. He had obtained previous structural analysis
experience while working for Boeing in 1985.
At Duke, Dr. Laursen teaches undergraduate courses
in engineering computing and engineering science and teaches graduate
courses in continuum mechanics, engineering analysis, finite element
methods, and the use of finite element methods for the solution
of nonlinear problems. His research activities fall largely under
these same categories, with a special interest in the modeling of
physical systems exhibiting contact and friction phenomena in the
presence of large deformations, inelasticity, and other sources
of nonlinearity. Applications for this work are to be found in such
diverse settings as crashworthiness evaluation for automobiles,
wear characterization, metal forming applications, and the geophysical
description of slip propagation in fault zones.
Dr. Laursen's published work appears in such journals
as the Journal of Applied Mechanics, International Journal for Numerical
Methods in Engineering, Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and
Engineering, Journal of Materials Research, International Journal
of Solids and Structures, Computers and St
- Contact Info:
| Office Location: | 166 Hudson Engineering Annex |
| Office Phone: | +1 919 660 5430 |
| Email Address: |
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| Web Page: |
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- Education:
- PhD, Stanford University, 1992
- MS, Stanford University, 1989
- BS, Oregon State University, 1986
- Specialties:
-
Structural Engineering
Computational Mechanics
Engineering Education
- Representative Publications
(More Publications)
- Upton, Maureen L. and Guilak, Farshid and Laursen, Tod A. and Setton, Lori A., Finite element modeling predictions of region-specific cell-matrix mechanics in the meniscus,
Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology, vol. 5 no. 2-3
(2006),
pp. 140 - 149 [s10237-006-0031-4] [abs].
- Trickey, Wendy R. and Baaijens, Frank P.T. and Laursen, Tod A. and Alexopoulos, Leonidas G. and Guilak, Farshid, Determination of the Poisson's ratio of the cell: Recovery properties of chondrocytes after release from complete micropipette aspiration,
Journal of Biomechanics, vol. 39 no. 1
(2006),
pp. 78 - 87 [006] [abs].
- Stanciulescu, Ilinca and Laursen, Tod A., On the interaction of frictional formulations with bifurcation phenomena in hyperelastic steady state rolling calculations,
International Journal of Solids and Structures, vol. 43 no. 10
(2006),
pp. 2959 - 2988 [039] [abs].
- Laursen, Tod A. and Stanciulescu, Ilinca, An algorithm for incorporation of frictional sliding conditions within a steady state rolling framework,
Communications in Numerical Methods in Engineering, vol. 22 no. 4
(2006),
pp. 301 - 318 [815] [abs].
- Baaijens, Frank P.T. and Trickey, Wendy R. and Laursen, Tod A. and Guilak, Farshid, Large deformation finite element analysis of micropipette aspiration to determine the mechanical properties of the chondrocyte,
Annals of Biomedical Engineering, vol. 33 no. 4
(2005),
pp. 494 - 501 [s10439-005-2506-3] [abs].
- Yang, Bin and Laursen, Tod A. and Meng, Xiaonong, Two dimensional mortar contact methods for large deformation frictional sliding,
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering, vol. 62 no. 9
(2005),
pp. 1183 - 1225 [1222] [abs].
- Puso, Michael A. and Laursen, Tod A., A mortar segment-to-segment contact method for large deformation solid mechanics,
Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, vol. 193 no. 6-8
(2004),
pp. 601 - 629 [010] [abs].
- Puso, Michael A. and Laursen, Tod A., A mortar segment-to-segment frictional contact method for large deformations,
Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, vol. 193 no. 45-47
(2004),
pp. 4891 - 4913 [001] [abs].