Reducing three-dimensional elasticity problems to two-dimensional problems by approximating stresses and displacements by legendre polynomials

2007 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 450-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu. M. Volchkov ◽  
L. A. Dergileva
1980 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
P S Theocaris ◽  
N I Ioakimidis

The optical method of caustics constitutes an efficient experimental technique for the determination of quantities of interest in elasticity problems. Up to now, this method has been applied only to two-dimensional elasticity problems (including plate and shell problems). In this paper, the method of caustics is extended to the case of three-dimensional elasticity problems. The particular problems of a concentrated force and a uniformly distributed loading acting normally on a half-space (on a circular region) are treated in detail. Experimentally obtained caustics for the first of these problems were seen to be in satisfactory agreement with the corresponding theoretical forms. The treatment of various, more complicated, three-dimensional elasticity problems, including contact problems, by the method of caustics is also possible.


1949 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 469
Author(s):  
W Freiberger ◽  
RCT Smith

In this paper we discuss the flexure of an incomplete tore in the plane of its circular centre-line. We reduce the problem to the determination of two harmonic functions, subject to boundary conditions on the surface of the tore which involve the first two derivatives of the functions. We point out the relation of this solution to the general solution of three-dimensional elasticity problems. The special case of a narrow rectangular cross-section is solved exactly in Appendix II.


Author(s):  
T. T. C. Ting

In this chapter we study Stroh's sextic formalism for two-dimensional deformations of an anisotropic elastic body. The Stroh formalism can be traced to the work of Eshelby, Read, and Shockley (1953). We therefore present the latter first. Not all results presented in this chapter are due to Stroh (1958, 1962). Nevertheless we name the sextic formalism after Stroh because he laid the foundations for researchers who followed him. The derivation of Stroh's formalism is rather simple and straightforward. The general solution resembles that obtained by the Lekhnitskii formalism. However, the resemblance between the two formalisms stops there. As we will see in the rest of the book, the Stroh formalism is indeed mathematically elegant and technically powerful in solving two-dimensional anisotropic elasticity problems. The possibility of extending the formalism to three-dimensional deformations is explored in Chapter 15.


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