Carnot’s General Axiom. Local Theory: Reech’s First Theorem, First Principal Lemma

Author(s):  
Clifford Ambrose Truesdell ◽  
Subramanyam Bharatha
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Roger Godement ◽  
Hervé Jacquet
Keyword(s):  

Nanomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 453
Author(s):  
Razie Izadi ◽  
Meral Tuna ◽  
Patrizia Trovalusci ◽  
Esmaeal Ghavanloo

Efficient application of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in nano-devices and nano-materials requires comprehensive understanding of their mechanical properties. As observations suggest size dependent behaviour, non-classical theories preserving the memory of body’s internal structure via additional material parameters offer great potential when a continuum modelling is to be preferred. In the present study, micropolar theory of elasticity is adopted due to its peculiar character allowing for incorporation of scale effects through additional kinematic descriptors and work-conjugated stress measures. An optimisation approach is presented to provide unified material parameters for two specific class of single-walled carbon nanotubes (e.g., armchair and zigzag) by minimizing the difference between the apparent shear modulus obtained from molecular dynamics (MD) simulation and micropolar beam model considering both solid and tubular cross-sections. The results clearly reveal that micropolar theory is more suitable compared to internally constraint couple stress theory, due to the essentiality of having skew-symmetric stress and strain measures, as well as to the classical local theory (Cauchy of Grade 1), which cannot accounts for scale effects. To the best of authors’ knowledge, this is the first time that unified material parameters of CNTs are derived through a combined MD-micropolar continuum theory.


Author(s):  
M Shariyat

Based on the idea of double superposition, an accurate high-order global–local theoryis proposed for bending and vibration analysis of cylindrical shells subjected to thermo-mechanical loads, for the first time. The theory has many novelties, among them: (1) less computational time due to the use of the global–local technique and matrix formulations; (2) satisfaction of the complete kinematic and transverse stress continuity conditions at the layer interfaces under thermo-mechanical loads; (3) consideration of the transverse flexibility; (4) release of Love–Timoshenko assumption; and (5) capability of investigating the local phenomena. Various comparative examples are included to validate the theory and to examine its accuracy and efficiency.


Author(s):  
Raimundo Carmona Puerta ◽  
Elizabeth Lorenzo Martínez ◽  
Magda Alina Rabassa López-Calleja ◽  
Gustavo Padrón Peña ◽  
Juan Miguel Cruz Elizundia ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (04) ◽  
pp. 727-763
Author(s):  
Anudeep Kumar Arora ◽  
Svetlana Roudenko

We study the generalized Hartree equation, which is a nonlinear Schrödinger-type equation with a nonlocal potential [Formula: see text]. We establish the local well-posedness at the nonconserved critical regularity [Formula: see text] for [Formula: see text], which also includes the energy-supercritical regime [Formula: see text] (thus, complementing the work in [A. K. Arora and S. Roudenko, Global behavior of solutions to the focusing generalized Hartree equation, Michigan Math J., forthcoming], where we obtained the [Formula: see text] well-posedness in the intercritical regime together with classification of solutions under the mass–energy threshold). We next extend the local theory to global: for small data we obtain global in time existence and for initial data with positive energy and certain size of variance we show the finite time blow-up (blow-up criterion). In the intercritical setting the criterion produces blow-up solutions with the initial values above the mass–energy threshold. We conclude with examples showing currently known thresholds for global vs. finite time behavior.


Author(s):  
Marco Brunella
Keyword(s):  

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