97 research outputs found

    A new div-curl result. Applications to the homogenization of elliptic systems and to the weak continuity of the Jacobian

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    In this paper a new div-curl result is established in an open set Ω\Omega of RN\mathbb{R}^N, N2N\geq 2, for the product of two sequences of vector-valued functions which are bounded respectively in Lp(Ω)NL^p(\Omega)^N and Lq(Ω)NL^q(\Omega)^N, with 1/p+1/q=1+1/(N1){1/p}+{1/q}=1+{1/(N-1)}, and whose respectively divergence and curl are compact in suitable spaces. We also assume that the product converges weakly in W1,1(Ω)W^{-1,1}(\Omega). The key ingredient of the proof is a compactness result for bounded sequences in W1,q(Ω)W^{1,q}(\Omega), based on the imbedding of W1,q(S_N1)W^{1,q}(S\_{N-1}) into Lp(S_N1)L^{p'}(S\_{N-1}) (S_N1S\_{N-1} the unit sphere of RN\mathbb{R}^N) through a suitable selection of annuli on which the gradients are not too high, in the spirit of De Giorgi and Manfredi. The div-curl result is applied to the homogenization of equi-coercive systems whose coefficients are equi-bounded in Lρ(Ω)L^\rho(\Omega) for some \rho\textgreater{}{N-1\over 2} if N\textgreater{}2, or in L1(Ω)L^1(\Omega) if N=2N=2. It also allows us to prove a weak continuity result for the Jacobian for bounded sequences in W1,N1(Ω)W^{1,N-1}(\Omega) satisfying an alternative assumption to the LL^\infty-strong estimate of Brezis and Nguyen. Two examples show the sharpness of the results

    Realizable response matrices of multiterminal electrical, acoustic, and elastodynamic networks at a given frequency

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    We give a complete characterization of the possible response matrices at a fixed frequency of n-terminal electrical networks of inductors, capacitors, resistors and grounds, and of n-terminal discrete linear elastodynamic networks of springs and point masses, both in the three-dimensional case and in the two-dimensional case. Specifically we construct networks which realize any response matrix which is compatible with the known symmetry properties and thermodynamic constraints of response matrices. Due to a mathematical equivalence we also obtain a characterization of the response matrices of discrete acoustic networks.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure

    Two-scale convergence for locally-periodic microstructures and homogenization of plywood structures

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    The introduced notion of locally-periodic two-scale convergence allows to average a wider range of microstructures, compared to the periodic one. The compactness theorem for the locally-periodic two-scale convergence and the characterisation of the limit for a sequence bounded in H1(Ω)H^1(\Omega) are proven. The underlying analysis comprises the approximation of functions, which periodicity with respect to the fast variable depends on the slow variable, by locally-periodic functions, periodic in subdomains smaller than the considered domain, but larger than the size of microscopic structures. The developed theory is applied to derive macroscopic equations for a linear elasticity problem defined in domains with plywood structures.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure

    Locally periodic unfolding method and two-scale convergence on surfaces of locally periodic microstructures

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    In this paper we generalize the periodic unfolding method and the notion of two-scale convergence on surfaces of periodic microstructures to locally periodic situations. The methods that we introduce allow us to consider a wide range of non-periodic microstructures, especially to derive macroscopic equations for problems posed in domains with perforations distributed non-periodically. Using the methods of locally periodic two-scale convergence (l-t-s) on oscillating surfaces and the locally periodic (l-p) boundary unfolding operator, we are able to analyze differential equations defined on boundaries of non-periodic microstructures and consider non-homogeneous Neumann conditions on the boundaries of perforations, distributed non-periodically

    Interior Regularity Estimates in High Conductivity Homogenization and Application

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    In this paper, uniform pointwise regularity estimates for the solutions of conductivity equations are obtained in a unit conductivity medium reinforced by a epsilon-periodic lattice of highly conducting thin rods. The estimates are derived only at a distance epsilon^{1+tau} (for some tau>0) away from the fibres. This distance constraint is rather sharp since the gradients of the solutions are shown to be unbounded locally in L^p as soon as p>2. One key ingredient is the derivation in dimension two of regularity estimates to the solutions of the equations deduced from a Fourier series expansion with respect to the fibres direction, and weighted by the high-contrast conductivity. The dependence on powers of epsilon of these two-dimensional estimates is shown to be sharp. The initial motivation for this work comes from imaging, and enhanced resolution phenomena observed experimentally in the presence of micro-structures. We use these regularity estimates to characterize the signature of low volume fraction heterogeneities in the fibred reinforced medium assuming that the heterogeneities stay at a distance epsilon^{1+tau} away from the fibres

    Effective macroscopic dynamics of stochastic partial differential equations in perforated domains

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    An effective macroscopic model for a stochastic microscopic system is derived. The original microscopic system is modeled by a stochastic partial differential equation defined on a domain perforated with small holes or heterogeneities. The homogenized effective model is still a stochastic partial differential equation but defined on a unified domain without holes. The solutions of the microscopic model is shown to converge to those of the effective macroscopic model in probability distribution, as the size of holes diminishes to zero. Moreover, the long time effectivity of the macroscopic system in the sense of \emph{convergence in probability distribution}, and the effectivity of the macroscopic system in the sense of \emph{convergence in energy} are also proved

    Bounds on strong field magneto-transport in three-dimensional composites

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    This paper deals with bounds satisfied by the effective non-symmetric conductivity of three-dimensional composites in the presence of a strong magnetic field. On the one hand, it is shown that for general composites the antisymmetric part of the effective conductivity cannot be bounded solely in terms of the antisymmetric part of the local conductivity, contrary to the columnar case. So, a suitable rank-two laminate the conductivity of which has a bounded antisymmetric part together with a high-contrast symmetric part, may generate an arbitrarily large antisymmetric part of the effective conductivity. On the other hand, bounds are provided which show that the antisymmetric part of the effective conductivity must go to zero if the upper bound on the antisymmetric part of the local conductivity goes to zero, and the symmetric part of the local conductivity remains bounded below and above. Elementary bounds on the effective moduli are derived assuming the local conductivity and effective conductivity have transverse isotropy in the plane orthogonal to the magnetic field. New Hashin-Shtrikman type bounds for two-phase three-dimensional composites with a non-symmetric conductivity are provided under geometric isotropy of the microstructure. The derivation of the bounds is based on a particular variational principle symmetrizing the problem, and the use of Y-tensors involving the averages of the fields in each phase.Comment: 21 page
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