NONLINEARLY ELASTIC THIN PLATE MODELS FOR A CLASS OF OGDEN MATERIALS: I

2005 ◽  
Vol 03 (02) ◽  
pp. 195-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
KARIM TRABELSI

A new two-dimensional nonlinear membrane plate theory is derived via a formal asymptotic procedure for a family of hyperelastic nonlinear materials proposed by Ciarlet and Geymonat [11], whose stored energy function is polyconvex and becomes infinite, when the determinant of the deformation gradient tends to zero, and can be adjusted to arbitrary Lamé constants.

2005 ◽  
Vol 03 (03) ◽  
pp. 271-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
KARIM TRABELSI

This paper is a sequel to Part I (Trabelsi [11]) in which a new two-dimensional membrane model was derived via a formal asymptotic procedure for a family of hyperelastic nonlinear materials proposed by Ciarlet and Geymonat whose stored energy function is polyconvex and becomes infinite when the determinant of the deformation gradient tends to zero, and can be adjusted to arbitrary Lamé constants. Here, we continue the asymptotic analysis by making legitimate assumptions on the data to produce an inextensional two-dimensional model.


1964 ◽  
Vol 4 (02) ◽  
pp. 133-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.H. Rachford

Rachford Jr., H.H., Member AIME, Humble Oil and Refining Co., Houston, Tex. Abstract This work presents a first-order analysis of the instability underlying viscous fingering in adverse viscosity-ratio water floods. It extends previous analyses of frontal instabilities, which were carried out with equations for parallel plate models, by including effects of the saturation transition zone observed behind the front in water floods in water wet systems. This zone tends to insulate incipient fingers from the high-mobility water; thus conditions for the onset of fingering differ from those in the parallel plate theory. Finite-difference solutions of the two-dimensional equations of displacement in porous media exhibited the predicted stability characteristics in six hypothetical field- and laboratory-scale floods in rectangular reservoirs. In contrast to results with parallel plate systems, this paper concludes that for water-wet reservoirs, laboratory models scaled by the usual criteria are also correctly scaled for frontal instability. Further, fingering in the systems studied can occur in any saturation range behind the front, and may occur at an intermediate saturation even though stability obtains both at the saturation corresponding to the Buckley-Leverett front and near residual oil saturation. Other points of contrast are that the likelihood of occurrence of fingering may not increase as flow rate or viscosity difference increases, but may be sensitive to changes in the relative permeability and capillary pressure functions. Introduction The recovery of oil by water flooding frequently involves displacing the oil by water of a lower viscosity. Displacement of a fluid by a less viscous one may lead to gross channeling or fingering like that observed in solvent floods, in which it severely lowers recovery efficiency. In addition to adverse effects on recovery, it has been suggested that the unstable movement causing fingering may interfere with interpretation of scaled model studies of proposed water floods, since the instability in the model might not be faithfully scaled to that in the reservoir prototype. In view of the serious implications of this possible breakdown of widely used scaled model techniques, it is the purpose of this paper to examine the question further. Instabilities in the solutions of systems of differential equations imply a loss of smooth dependence on initial and boundary conditions. Thus, the possibility exists that in using models whose scaling is based on the differential system there may arise size- and rate-dependent factors which are not properly scaled. This possibility was examined in detail by Chouke et al., who analyzed the instability of frontal advance in a related problem, water-oil displacement in parallel plate models, in which a moving interface separates two regions of constant, unequal mobilities. First-order perturbation theory predicts the existence of a critical wave length for the growth of perturbations: and a wave length of maximum instability of . The interpretation is that wave lengths in a perturbation which are longer than will grow. Thus, if the width of a two-dimensional channel is greater than, fingers will grow, and the spacing of the fingers which grow at the maximum rate will be approximately. It is important that the higher the velocity and/or the difference in flow resistance, the lower is, and thus the greater the number of fingers that can grow in a given model. In applying these conclusions to porous media, a pseudo-interfacial tension, was assumed for the invasion front. Since this would not necessarily be equal to the liquid-liquid interfacial tension, an unknown constant was substituted for in the foregoing expression for. JPT P. 133ˆ


Author(s):  
Jeyabal Sivaloganathan ◽  
Scott J. Spector

When a rectangular bar is subjected to uniaxial tension, the bar usually deforms (approximately) homogeneously and isoaxially until a critical load is reached. A bifurcation, such as the formation of shear bands or a neck, may then be observed. One approach is to model such an experiment as the in-plane extension of a two-dimensional, homogeneous, isotropic, incompressible, hyperelastic material in which the length of the bar is prescribed, the ends of the bar are assumed to be free of shear and the sides are left completely free. It is shown that standard constitutive hypotheses on the stored-energy function imply that no such bifurcation is possible in this model due to the fact that the homogeneous isoaxial deformation is the unique absolute minimizer of the elastic energy. Thus, in order for a bifurcation to occur either the material must cease to be elastic or the stored-energy function must violate the standard hypotheses. The fact that no local bifurcations can occur under the assumptions used herein was known previously, since these assumptions prohibit the load on the bar from reaching a maximum value. However, the fact that the homogeneous deformation is the absolute minimizer of the energy appears to be a new result.


2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (14) ◽  
pp. 2833-2861 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe G. Ciarlet ◽  
Cristinel Mardare

We propose a minimization problem with a stored energy function that is polyconvex and satisfies all the other assumptions of John Ball’s theorem, while being at the same time well adapted for modeling a nonlinearly elastic shell. By restricting the admissible deformations to be specific quadratic polynomials with respect to the transverse variable, we are able to define a new nonlinear shell model for which a satisfactory existence theory is available and that is still two-dimensional, in the sense that minimizing the corresponding total energy amounts to finding three vector fields defined on the closure of a bounded open subset of [Formula: see text]. The most noteworthy feature of our nonlinear shell model is that the “lowest order part” of its stored energy function coincides, at least formally, with the stored energy function found in Koiter’s model for a specific class of deformations that are to within the first-order identical to the Kirchhoff–Love deformations considered by W. T. Koiter.


2006 ◽  
Vol 04 (01) ◽  
pp. 31-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
KARIM TRABELSI

In this paper, we derive nonlinearly elastic membrane plate models for hyperelastic incompressible materials using Γ-convergence arguments. We obtain an integral representation of the limit two-dimensional internal energy owing to a result of singular functionals relaxation due to Ben Belgacem [6].


Author(s):  
Sergey I. Zhavoronok

he extended plate theory of I.N. Vekua – A.A. Amosov type is constructed on the background of the dimensional reduction approach and the Lagrangian variational formalism of analytical dynamics. The proposed theory allows one to obtain the hierarchy of refined plate models of different orders and to satisfy the boundary conditions on plates’ faces exactly by introducing the corresponding constraint equations into the Lagrangian model of two-dimensional continuum. The normal wave dispersion in an elastic layer is considered, the convergence of the two-dimensional solutions to the exact one is studied for the locking phase frequencies, the dimensionless stress distributions across the thickness of a layer are shown.


2014 ◽  
Vol 225 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 1153-1166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhen-Bang Kuang

2014 ◽  
Vol 494-495 ◽  
pp. 693-696
Author(s):  
X.J. Ren ◽  
C.X. Xue

In this paper, an intelligent magnetoelectroelastic thin plate is coupled with a transverse magnetic field and uniformly distributed load. Considering the von Karman plate theory of large deflection and the geometric nonlinearity, the damping Duffing equation is obtained. Using the Melnikov function method, the Chaos condition of the system under the Smale horseshoe transformation is obtained. The bifurcation diagram, the wave diagram of displacement, and the phase diagram are shown here by the numerical analysis. The simulation results show the complex nonlinear vibration characters of the intelligent magneto-electro-elastic thin plate.


1981 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 345-350
Author(s):  
W. Dreyer

Based on experimental evidence and thermodynamics it will be shown that the stored energy function of an ideal rubber membrane is determined by the entropy alone. The membrane is represented by a two-dimensional surface for the purposes of thermodynamics, and its thickness is taken into account by a scalar parameter so that incompressibility of the membrane can be described. The entropy of the membrane is calculated from a kinetic model and hence results the surface stress as a function of temperature and deformation for arbitrary shape of the membrane.


Author(s):  
Giovanni Tocci Monaco ◽  
Nicholas Fantuzzi ◽  
Francesco Fabbrocino ◽  
Raimondo Luciano

AbstractIn this work, the bending behavior of nanoplates subjected to both sinusoidal and uniform loads in hygrothermal environment is investigated. The present plate theory is based on the classical laminated thin plate theory with strain gradient effect to take into account the nonlocality present in the nanostructures. The equilibrium equations have been carried out by using the principle of virtual works and a system of partial differential equations of the sixth order has been carried out, in contrast to the classical thin plate theory system of the fourth order. The solution has been obtained using a trigonometric expansion (e.g., Navier method) which is applicable to simply supported boundary conditions and limited lamination schemes. The solution is exact for sinusoidal loads; nevertheless, convergence has to be proved for other load types such as the uniform one. Both the effect of the hygrothermal loads and lamination schemes (cross-ply and angle-ply nanoplates) on the bending behavior of thin nanoplates are studied. Results are reported in dimensionless form and validity of the present methodology has been proven, when possible, by comparing the results to the ones from the literature (available only for cross-ply laminates). Novel applications are shown both for cross- and angle-ply laminated which can be considered for further developments in the same topic.


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