kirchhoff plate model
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2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Said Mesloub ◽  
Faten Aldosari

AbstractWe show herein the existence and uniqueness of solutions for coupled fractional order partial differential equations modeling a thermoelastic fractional Kirchhoff plate model associated with initial, Dirichlet, and nonlocal boundary conditions involving fractional Caputo derivative. Some efficient results of existence and uniqueness are obtained by employing the energy inequality method.


Author(s):  
Andrea Bonito ◽  
Ricardo H. Nochetto ◽  
Dimitrios Ntogkas

We propose a new discontinuous Galerkin (dG) method for a geometrically nonlinear Kirchhoff plate model for large isometric bending deformations. The minimization problem is nonconvex due to the isometry constraint. We present a practical discrete gradient flow that decreases the energy and computes discrete minimizers that satisfy a prescribed discrete isometry defect. We prove [Formula: see text]-convergence of the discrete energies and discrete global minimizers. We document the flexibility and accuracy of the dG method with several numerical experiments.


Author(s):  
Robert Denk ◽  
Jürgen Saal

Abstract We consider a fluid–structure interaction model for an incompressible fluid where the elastic response of the free boundary is given by a damped Kirchhoff plate model. Utilizing the Newton polygon approach, we first prove maximal regularity in $$L^p$$ L p -Sobolev spaces for a linearized version. Based on this, we show existence and uniqueness of the strong solution of the nonlinear system for small data.


Author(s):  
Natalia Sabourova ◽  
Niklas Grip ◽  
Ulf Ohlsson ◽  
Lennart Elfgren ◽  
Yongming Tu ◽  
...  

<p>Structural damage is often a spatially sparse phenomenon, i.e. it occurs only in a small part of the structure. This property of damage has not been utilized in the field of structural damage identification until quite recently, when the sparsity-based regularization developed in compressed sensing problems found its application in this field.</p><p>In this paper we consider classical sensitivity-based finite element model updating combined with a regularization technique appropriate for the expected type of sparse damage. Traditionally, (I), &#119897;2- norm regularization was used to solve the ill-posed inverse problems, such as damage identification. However, using already well established, (II), &#119897;l-norm regularization or our proposed, (III), &#119897;l-norm total variation regularization and, (IV), general dictionary-based regularization allows us to find damages with special spatial properties quite precisely using much fewer measurement locations than the number of possibly damaged elements of the structure. The validity of the proposed methods is demonstrated using simulations on a Kirchhoff plate model. The pros and cons of these methods are discussed.</p>


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