On the role of the strong ellipticity condition in nonlinear elasticity

1983 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 1359-1367 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Aron
Author(s):  
Taisiya Sigaeva ◽  
Robert Mangan ◽  
Luigi Vergori ◽  
Michel Destrade ◽  
Les Sudak

We study what is clearly one of the most common modes of deformation found in nature, science and engineering, namely the large elastic bending of curved structures, as well as its inverse, unbending, which can be brought beyond complete straightening to turn into eversion. We find that the suggested mathematical solution to these problems always exists and is unique when the solid is modelled as a homogeneous, isotropic, incompressible hyperelastic material with a strain-energy satisfying the strong ellipticity condition. We also provide explicit asymptotic solutions for thin sectors. When the deformations are severe enough, the compressed side of the elastic material may buckle and wrinkles could then develop. We analyse, in detail, the onset of this instability for the Mooney–Rivlin strain energy, which covers the cases of the neo-Hookean model in exact nonlinear elasticity and of third-order elastic materials in weakly nonlinear elasticity. In particular, the associated theoretical and numerical treatment allows us to predict the number and wavelength of the wrinkles. Guided by experimental observations, we finally look at the development of creases, which we simulate through advanced finite-element computations. In some cases, the linearized analysis allows us to predict correctly the number and the wavelength of the creases, which turn out to occur only a few per cent of strain earlier than the wrinkles.


2020 ◽  
Vol 373 ◽  
pp. 124982 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weiyang Ding ◽  
Jinjie Liu ◽  
Liqun Qi ◽  
Hong Yan

2016 ◽  
Vol 78 (6-5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nur Fadhilah Ibrahim ◽  
Nurul Akmal Mohamed

The applications of real rectangular tensors, among others, including the strong ellipticity condition problem within solid mechanics, and the entanglement problem within quantum physics. A method was suggested by Zhou, Caccetta and Qi in 2013, as a means of calculating the largest singular value of a nonnegative rectangular tensor. In this paper, we show that the method converges under weak irreducibility condition, and that it has a Q-linear convergence.   


2017 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 504-515
Author(s):  
V Yu Salamatova ◽  
Yu V Vasilevskii

The condition of ellipticity of the equilibrium equation plays an important role for correct description of mechanical behavior of materials and is a necessary condition for new defining relationships. Earlier, new deformation measures were proposed to vanish correlations between the terms, that dramatically simplifies restoration of defining relationships from experimental data. One of these new deformation measures is based on the QR-expansion of deformation gradient. In this paper, we study the strong ellipticity condition for hyperelastic material using the QR-expansion of deformation gradient.


2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
pp. 0
Author(s):  
Chong Wang ◽  
Gang Wang ◽  
Lixia Liu

<p style='text-indent:20px;'>In this paper, we establish sharp upper and lower bounds on the minimum <i>M</i>-eigenvalue via the extreme eigenvalue of the symmetric matrices extracted from elasticity <i>Z</i>-tensors without irreducible conditions. Based on the lower bound estimations for the minimum <i>M</i>-eigenvalue, we provide some checkable sufficient or necessary conditions for the strong ellipticity condition. Numerical examples are given to demonstrate the proposed results.</p>


Author(s):  
Pradeep Mahadevan ◽  
Anindya Chatterjee

We consider an axially loaded Timoshenko rotor rotating at a constant speed and derive its governing equations from a continuum viewpoint. The primary aim of this paper is to understand the source and role of gyroscopic terms, when the rotor is viewed not as a Timoshenko beam but as a genuine 3D continuum. We offer the primary insight that macroscopically observed gyroscopic terms may also, quite equivalently, be viewed as external manifestations of internally existing spin-induced prestresses at the continuum level. To demonstrate this idea with an analytical example (the Timoshenko rotor), we have studied the reliable equations of Choi et al. (Journal of Vibration and Acoustics, 114, 1992, 249–259). Using a straightforward application of our insight in the framework of nonlinear elasticity, we obtain equations that exactly match Choi et al. for the case with no axial load. For the case of axial preload, our straightforward formulation leads to a slightly different set of equations that have negligible numerical consequence for solid rotors. However, we offer a macroscopic, intuitive, justification for modifying our formulation so as to obtain the exact equations of Choi et al. with the axial load included.


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