1 / 22

A hierarchy of theories for thin elastic bodies

A hierarchy of theories for thin elastic bodies . Stefan Müller MPI for Mathematics in the Sciences, Leipzig www.mis.mpg.de. B ath I nstitute for C omplex S ystems Multi-scale problems: Modelling, analysis and applications 12th – 14th September 2005.

onslow
Télécharger la présentation

A hierarchy of theories for thin elastic bodies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A hierarchy of theoriesfor thin elastic bodies Stefan Müller MPI for Mathematics in the Sciences, Leipzig www.mis.mpg.de Bath Institute for Complex Systems Multi-scale problems: Modelling, analysis and applications 12th – 14th September 2005

  2. Nonlinear elasticity 3d  2d • Major question since the beginning of elasticity theory • Why ? • 2d simpler to understand, visualize • Important in engineering and biology • Qualitatively new behaviour: crumpling, collapse • Subtle influence of geometry (large rotations) • Very non-scalar behaviour `Zoo of theories´ First rigorous results: LeDret-Raoult (´93-´96) (membrane theory, -convergence) Acerbi-Buttazzo-Percivale (´91) (rods, -convergence) Mielke (´88) (rods, centre manifolds)

  3. Beyond membranes Key point: Low energy  close to rotation Classical result Need quantitative version

  4. Rigidity estimate/ Nonlinear Korn Thm. (Friesecke, James, M.) L2 distance from a point L2 distance from a set Remarks 1. F. John (1961) u BiLip, dist (u, SO(n)) <   Birth of BMO 2. Y.G. Reshetnyak Almost conformal maps: weak implies strong 3. Linearization  Korn´s inequality 4. Scaling is optimal (and this is crucial) 5. Ok for Lp, 1 < p < 

  5. Rigidity estimate – an application L2 distance from a point L2 distance from a set Thm. (DalMaso-Negri-Percivale) 3d nonlinear elasticity 3d geom. linear elasticity Gives rigorous status to singular solutions in linear elasticity Question: For which sets besides SO(n) does such an estimate hold ? Faraco-Zhong (quasiconformal), Chaudhuri-M. (2 wells), DeLellis-Szekelyhidi (abstract version)

  6. Idea of proof 1. Four-line proof for (Reshetnyak, Kinderlehrer) 2. First part of the real proof: perturb this argument This yields (interior) bound by , not

  7. Proof of rigidity estimate I Step 0: Wlog `truncation of gradients´ (Liu, Ziemer, Evans-Gariepy) Step1: Let Take divergence Compute

  8. Proof of rigidity estimate II Step 2: We know Linearize at F = Id Set Korn  interior estimate with optimal scaling • Step 3: Estimate up to the boundary. • Cover by cubes with boundary distance  size • Weighted Poincaré inequality (`Hardy ineq.´)

  9. 3d nonlinear elasticity

  10. 3d  2d Rem. Same for shells (FJM + M.G. Mora)

  11. Gamma-convergence (De Giorgi)

  12. The limit functional (Kirchhoff 1850) isometry curvature „bending energy“ Geometrically nonlinear, Stress-strain relation linear (only matters)

  13. Idea of proof • One key point: compactness • Unscale to S x (0,h), divide into cubes of size h • Apply rigidity estimate to each cube: •  good approximation of deformation gradient • by rotation • Apply rigidity estimate to union of two neighbouring • cubes: • difference quotient estimate •  compactness, higher differentiability of the limit

  14. in-plane displacement out-of plane displacement Different scaling limits (Modulo rigid motions) Given  such that find , ,  for which

  15. A hierarchy of theories(natural boundary conditions) For  > 2 assume that force points in a single direction (which can be assumed normal to the plate) and has zero moment

  16. A hierarchy of theories(clamped boundary conditions, normal load)

  17. Unified limit for  > 2 (natural bc)

  18. Constrained theory for 2 <  < 4 One crucial ingredient for upper bound: Rem. Hartmann-Nirenberg, Pogorelov, Vodopyanov-Goldstein

  19. A wide field The range is a no man‘s land where interesting things happen Two signposts: • = 1: Complex blistering patterns in thin films with Dirichlet boundary conditions Scaling known/ Gamma-limit open (depends on bdry cond. ?) BenBelgacem-Conti-DeSimone-M., Jin-Sternberg, Hornung = 5/3: Crumpling of paper ? T. Witten et al., Pomeau, Ben Amar, Audoly, Mahadevan et al., Sharon et al., Venkataramani, Conti-Maggi, ... More general: reduced theories which capture systematically both membrane and bending effects

  20. Beyond minimizers (2d  1d)

  21. Beyond minimizers (2d  1d) A. Mielke, Centre manifolds

  22. Conclusions Rigidity estimate/ Nonlinear Korn inequality Small energy  Close to rigid motion • Reduction 3d to 2d: • Key point is geometry/ understanding (large) rotations • (F. John) • Hierarchy of limiting theories ordered by scaling of the energy Interesting and largely unexplored scaling regimes where different limiting theories interact Beyond minimizers …

More Related