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Containing case studies and examples, the book aims to cover
extensive research particularly on surface stress and topics
related to the variational approach to the subject, and
non-standard topics such as the rigorous treatment of constraints
and a full discussion of algebraic inequalities associated with
realistic material behaviour, and their implications. Serving as an
introduction to the basic elements of Finite Elasticity, this
textbook is the cornerstone for any graduate-level on the topic,
while also providing a template for a host of theories in Solid
Mechanics.
This book is the first collection of lipid-membrane research
conducted by leading mechanicians and experts in continuum
mechanics. It brings the overall intellectual framework afforded by
modern continuum mechanics to bear on a host of challenging
problems in lipid membrane physics. These include unique and
authoritative treatments of differential geometry, shape
elasticity, surface flow and diffusion, interleaf membrane
friction, phase transitions, electroelasticity and
flexoelectricity, and computational modelling.
This book presents the theory of plates and shells on the basis of
the three-dimensional parent theory. The authors explore the
thinness of the structure to represent the mechanics of the actual
thin three-dimensional body under consideration by a more tractable
two-dimensional theory associated with an interior surface. In this
way, the relatively complex three-dimensional continuum mechanics
of the thin body is replaced by a far more tractable
two-dimensional theory. To ensure that the resulting model is
predictive, it is necessary to compensate for this 'dimension
reduction' by assigning additional kinematical and dynamical
descriptors to the surface whose deformations are modelled by the
simpler two-dimensional theory. The authors avoid the various ad
hoc assumptions made in the historical development of the subject,
most notably the classical Kirchhoff-Love hypothesis requiring that
material lines initially normal to the shell surface remain so
after deformation. Instead, such conditions, when appropriate, are
here derived rather than postulated.
This book is the first collection of lipid-membrane research
conducted by leading mechanicians and experts in continuum
mechanics. It brings the overall intellectual framework afforded by
modern continuum mechanics to bear on a host of challenging
problems in lipid membrane physics. These include unique and
authoritative treatments of differential geometry, shape
elasticity, surface flow and diffusion, interleaf membrane
friction, phase transitions, electroelasticity and
flexoelectricity, and computational modelling.
Plasticity Theory is characterized by many competing and often
incompatible points of view. This book seeks to strengthen the
foundations of continuum plasticity theory, emphasizing a unifying
perspective grounded in the fundamental notion of material
symmetry. Steigmann's book offers a systematic framework for the
proper understanding of established models of plasticity and for
their modern extensions and generalizations. Particular emphasis is
placed on the differential-geometric aspects of the subject and
their role in illuminating the conceptual foundations of plasticity
theory. Classical models, together with several subjects of
interest in contemporary research, are developed in a unified
format. The book is addressed to graduate students and academics
working in the field of continuum mechanics.
Bringing together contributions on a diverse range of topics, this
text explores the relationship between discrete and continuum
mechanics as a tool to model new and complex metamaterials.
Providing a comprehensive bibliography and historical review of the
field, it covers mechanical, acoustic and pantographic
metamaterials, discusses Naive Model Theory and Lagrangian discrete
models, and their applications, and presents methods for
pantographic structures and variational methods for
multidisciplinary modeling and computation. The relationship
between discrete and continuous models is discussed from both
mathematical and engineering viewpoints, making the text ideal for
those interested in the foundation of mechanics and computational
applications, and innovative viewpoints on the use of discrete
systems to model metamaterials are presented for those who want to
go deeper into the field. An ideal text for graduate students and
researchers interested in continuum approaches to the study of
modern materials, in mechanical engineering, civil engineering,
applied mathematics, physics, and materials science.
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