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This book gives a comprehensive account of the formulation and
computational treatment of basic geometrically linear models in 1D.
To set the stage, it assembles some preliminaries regarding
necessary modelling, computational and mathematical tools.
Thereafter, the remaining parts are concerned with the actual
catalogue of computational material models. To this end, after
starting out with elasticity as a reference, further 15 different
basic variants of material models (5 x each of {visco-elasticity,
plasticity, visco-plasticity}, respectively) are systematically
explored. The presentation for each of these basic material models
is a stand-alone account and follows in each case the same
structure. On the one hand, this allows, in the true sense of a
catalogue, to consult each of the basic material models separately
without the need to refer to other basic material models. On the
other hand, even though this somewhat repetitious concept may seem
tedious, it allows to compare the formulation and resulting
algorithmic setting of the various basic material models and
thereby to uncover, in detail, similarities and differences. In
particular, the response of each basic material model is analysed
for the identical histories (Zig-Zag, Sine, Ramp) of prescribed
strain and stress so as to clearly showcase and to contrast to each
other the characteristics of the various modelling options.
From fabrication to testing and modeling this monograph covers all
aspects on the materials class of magneto active polymers. The
focus is on computational modeling of manufacturing processes and
material parameters. As other smart materials, these elastomers
have the ability to change electrical and mechanical properties
upon application of magnetic fields. This allows for novel
applications ranging from biomedical engineering to mechatronics.
The notion dealt with in this volume of proceedings is often traced
back to the late 19th-century writings of a rather obscure
scientist, C. V. Burton. A probable reason for this is that the
painstaking de ciphering of this author's paper in the
Philosophical Magazine (Vol. 33, pp. 191-204, 1891) seems to reveal
a notion that was introduced in math ematical form much later, that
of local structural rearrangement. This notion obviously takes
place on the material manifold of modern con tinuum mechanics. It
is more or less clear that seemingly different phe nomena - phase
transition, local destruction of matter in the form of the loss of
local ordering (such as in the appearance of structural defects or
of the loss of cohesion by the appearance of damage or the exten
sion of cracks), plasticity, material growth in the bulk or at the
surface by accretion, wear, and the production of debris - should
enter a com mon framework where, by pure logic, the material
manifold has to play a prominent role. Finding the mathematical
formulation for this was one of the great achievements of J. D.
Eshelby. He was led to consider the apparent but true motion or
displacement of embedded material inhomogeneities, and thus he
began to investigate the "driving force" causing this motion or
displacement, something any good mechanician would naturally
introduce through the duahty inherent in mechanics since J. L.
d'Alembert."
Con?gurational mechanics has attracted quite a bit of attention
from various - search ?elds over the recent years/decades. Having
been regarded in its infancy of the early years as a somewhat
obscureand almost mystic ?eld of researchthat could only be
understood by a happy few of insiders with a pronounced theoretical
inc- nation, con?gurational mechanics has developed by now into a
versatile tool that can be applied to a variety of problems. Since
the seminal works of Eshelby a general notion of con?gurational -
chanics has been developed and has successfully been applied to
many pr- lems involving various types of defects in continuous
media. The most pro- nent application is certainly the use of
con?gurational forces in fracture - chanics. However, as
con?gurational mechanics is related to arbitrary mat- ial
inhomogeneities it has also very successfully been applied to many
ma- rials science and engineering problems such as phase
transitions and inelastic deformations. Also the modeling of
materials with micro-structure evolution is an important ?eld, in
which con?gurational mechanics can provide a better understanding
of processes going on within the material. Besides these
mechanically, physically, and chemically motivated applications,
ideas from con?gurational mechanics are now increasingly applied
within computational mechanics.
This monograph details spatial and material vistas on non-linear
continuum mechanics in a dissipation-consistent approach. Thereby,
the spatial vista renders the common approach to nonlinear
continuum mechanics and corresponding spatial forces, whereas the
material vista elaborates on configurational mechanics and
corresponding material or rather configurational forces.
Fundamental to configurational mechanics is the concept of force.
In analytical mechanics, force is a derived object that is power
conjugate to changes of generalised coordinates. For a continuum
body, these are typically the spatial positions of its continuum
points. However, if in agreement with the second law, continuum
points, e.g. on the boundary, may also change their material
positions. Configurational forces are then power conjugate to these
configurational changes. A paradigm is a crack tip, i.e. a singular
part of the boundary changing its position during crack
propagation, with the related configurational force, typically the
J-integral, driving its evolution, thereby consuming power,
typically expressed as the energy release rate. Taken together,
configurational mechanics is an unconventional branch of continuum
physics rationalising and unifying the tendency of a continuum body
to change its material configuration. It is thus the ideal
formulation to tackle sophisticated problems in continuum defect
mechanics. Configurational mechanics is entirely free of
restrictions regarding geometrical and constitutive nonlinearities
and offers an accompanying versatile computational approach to
continuum defect mechanics. In this monograph, I present a detailed
summary account of my approach towards configurational mechanics,
thereby fostering my view that configurational forces are indeed
dissipation-consistent to configurational changes.
This book gives a comprehensive account of the formulation and
computational treatment of basic geometrically linear models in 1D.
To set the stage, it assembles some preliminaries regarding
necessary modelling, computational and mathematical tools.
Thereafter, the remaining parts are concerned with the actual
catalogue of computational material models. To this end, after
starting out with elasticity as a reference, further 15 different
basic variants of material models (5 x each of {visco-elasticity,
plasticity, visco-plasticity}, respectively) are systematically
explored. The presentation for each of these basic material models
is a stand-alone account and follows in each case the same
structure. On the one hand, this allows, in the true sense of a
catalogue, to consult each of the basic material models separately
without the need to refer to other basic material models. On the
other hand, even though this somewhat repetitious concept may seem
tedious, it allows to compare the formulation and resulting
algorithmic setting of the various basic material models and
thereby to uncover, in detail, similarities and differences. In
particular, the response of each basic material model is analysed
for the identical histories (Zig-Zag, Sine, Ramp) of prescribed
strain and stress so as to clearly showcase and to contrast to each
other the characteristics of the various modelling options.
This book illustrates the deep roots of the geometrically nonlinear
kinematics of generalized continuum mechanics in differential
geometry. Besides applications to first- order elasticity and
elasto-plasticity an appreciation thereof is particularly
illuminating for generalized models of continuum mechanics such as
second-order (gradient-type) elasticity and elasto-plasticity.
After a motivation that arises from considering geometrically
linear first- and second- order crystal plasticity in Part I
several concepts from differential geometry, relevant for what
follows, such as connection, parallel transport, torsion,
curvature, and metric for holonomic and anholonomic coordinate
transformations are reiterated in Part II. Then, in Part III, the
kinematics of geometrically nonlinear continuum mechanics are
considered. There various concepts of differential geometry, in
particular aspects related to compatibility, are generically
applied to the kinematics of first- and second- order geometrically
nonlinear continuum mechanics. Together with the discussion on the
integrability conditions for the distortions and
double-distortions, the concepts of dislocation, disclination and
point-defect density tensors are introduced. For concreteness,
after touching on nonlinear fir st- and second-order elasticity, a
detailed discussion of the kinematics of (multiplicative) first-
and second-order elasto-plasticity is given. The discussion
naturally culminates in a comprehensive set of different types of
dislocation, disclination and point-defect density tensors. It is
argued, that these can potentially be used to model densities of
geometrically necessary defects and the accompanying hardening in
crystalline materials. Eventually Part IV summarizes the above
findings on integrability whereby distinction is made between the
straightforward conditions for the distortion and the
double-distortion being integrable and the more involved conditions
for the strain (metric) and the double-strain (connection) being
integrable. The book addresses readers with an interest in
continuum modelling of solids from engineering and the sciences
alike, whereby a sound knowledge of tensor calculus and continuum
mechanics is required as a prerequisite.
Con?gurational mechanics has attracted quite a bit of attention
from various - search ?elds over the recent years/decades. Having
been regarded in its infancy of the early years as a somewhat
obscureand almost mystic ?eld of researchthat could only be
understood by a happy few of insiders with a pronounced theoretical
inc- nation, con?gurational mechanics has developed by now into a
versatile tool that can be applied to a variety of problems. Since
the seminal works of Eshelby a general notion of con?gurational -
chanics has been developed and has successfully been applied to
many pr- lems involving various types of defects in continuous
media. The most pro- nent application is certainly the use of
con?gurational forces in fracture - chanics. However, as
con?gurational mechanics is related to arbitrary mat- ial
inhomogeneities it has also very successfully been applied to many
ma- rials science and engineering problems such as phase
transitions and inelastic deformations. Also the modeling of
materials with micro-structure evolution is an important ?eld, in
which con?gurational mechanics can provide a better understanding
of processes going on within the material. Besides these
mechanically, physically, and chemically motivated applications,
ideas from con?gurational mechanics are now increasingly applied
within computational mechanics.
The notion dealt with in this volume of proceedings is often traced
back to the late 19th-century writings of a rather obscure
scientist, C. V. Burton. A probable reason for this is that the
painstaking de ciphering of this author's paper in the
Philosophical Magazine (Vol. 33, pp. 191-204, 1891) seems to reveal
a notion that was introduced in math ematical form much later, that
of local structural rearrangement. This notion obviously takes
place on the material manifold of modern con tinuum mechanics. It
is more or less clear that seemingly different phe nomena - phase
transition, local destruction of matter in the form of the loss of
local ordering (such as in the appearance of structural defects or
of the loss of cohesion by the appearance of damage or the exten
sion of cracks), plasticity, material growth in the bulk or at the
surface by accretion, wear, and the production of debris - should
enter a com mon framework where, by pure logic, the material
manifold has to play a prominent role. Finding the mathematical
formulation for this was one of the great achievements of J. D.
Eshelby. He was led to consider the apparent but true motion or
displacement of embedded material inhomogeneities, and thus he
began to investigate the "driving force" causing this motion or
displacement, something any good mechanician would naturally
introduce through the duahty inherent in mechanics since J. L.
d'Alembert."
This monograph details spatial and material vistas on non-linear
continuum mechanics in a dissipation-consistent approach. Thereby,
the spatial vista renders the common approach to nonlinear
continuum mechanics and corresponding spatial forces, whereas the
material vista elaborates on configurational mechanics and
corresponding material or rather configurational forces.
Fundamental to configurational mechanics is the concept of force.
In analytical mechanics, force is a derived object that is power
conjugate to changes of generalised coordinates. For a continuum
body, these are typically the spatial positions of its continuum
points. However, if in agreement with the second law, continuum
points, e.g. on the boundary, may also change their material
positions. Configurational forces are then power conjugate to these
configurational changes. A paradigm is a crack tip, i.e. a singular
part of the boundary changing its position during crack
propagation, with the related configurational force, typically the
J-integral, driving its evolution, thereby consuming power,
typically expressed as the energy release rate. Taken together,
configurational mechanics is an unconventional branch of continuum
physics rationalising and unifying the tendency of a continuum body
to change its material configuration. It is thus the ideal
formulation to tackle sophisticated problems in continuum defect
mechanics. Configurational mechanics is entirely free of
restrictions regarding geometrical and constitutive nonlinearities
and offers an accompanying versatile computational approach to
continuum defect mechanics. In this monograph, I present a detailed
summary account of my approach towards configurational mechanics,
thereby fostering my view that configurational forces are indeed
dissipation-consistent to configurational changes.
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Paul Steinmann
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