73 research outputs found

    Structural-Damage Detection by Distributed Piezoelectric Transducers and Tuned Electric Circuits

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    A novel technique for damage detection of structures is introduced and discussed. It is based on purely electric measurements of the state variables of an electric network coupled to the main structure through a distributed set of piezoelectric patches. The constitutive parameters of this auxiliary network are optimized to increase the sensitivity of global measurements- as the frequency, response functions relative to selected electric degrees of freedom-with respect to a given class of variations in the structural-mechanical properties. Because the proposed method is based on purely electric input and output measurements, it allows for accurate results in the identification and localization of damages. Use of the electric frequency-response function to identify the mechanical damage leads to nonconvex optimization problems; therefore the proposed sensitivity-enhanced identification procedure becomes computationally efficient if an a priori knowledge about the damage is available.Comment: 18 page

    A phase-field model for fracture in beams from asymptotic results in 2D elasticity

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    We propose a derivation of a damage model in slender structures, focusing on the particular case of a rod. The peculiarity of the model is that it takes into account the changes in rigidity of the body, distinguishing between bending, traction and the possible mixed interactions between the two. The approach is based on a matched asymptotic expansion, taking the recent work of Baldelli et al [1] as starting point. Choosing the slenderness of the rod as small parameter for the asymptotic expansion, we determine the first order at which a correction occurs with respect to the Saint-Venant solution of the elastic problem, due to the presence of a crack. The results highlight that the presence of a defect affects in different ways the bending and traction rigidities of the rod, and that a coupling between the two deformation modes might occur, depending on the geometry of the crack. Moreover, the derivation allows to explicitly calculate the coefficients of this correction, for any given depth of the crack, by means of a simple numerical procedure. Application to the classic three-point bending problem is considered in order to highlight the predictive capabilities of the model. These results suggest ways in which state of the art phasefield models (e.g. [2]) for damage could be refined. This work goes in the direction of developing phase-field models suitable for application to slender structures, where the use of reduced dimensional models has proved promising [3]

    A variational model for plastic reorientation in fibrous material: numerical experiments on phase segregation

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    We propose a continuum model of fibrous material that may undergo an internal reorganization, which turns out in a plastic change of the orientation of the fibers when the remodeling torque achieves a threshold. We have recently found that the reorientation may induce a complex scenario in the response of such materials. In a traction test, we show that the most general transversely isotropic material may evolve in three different ways; in particular, the fibers asymptotically tend (regularly or with jumps): (A) to a given angle; (B) to align perpendicularly to the load direction; (C) to align with the load direction if their initial orientation is less than a given value otherwise perpendicularly. We focus on the latter material response (C) which has all the ingredients to manifest a phase transition phenomenon. Finally, we provide a numerical investigation to demonstrate phase segregation

    Generalized Hooke's law for isotropic second gradient materials

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    In the spirit of Germain the most general objective stored elastic energy for a second gradient material is deduced using a literature result of Fortun\'e & Vall\'ee. Linear isotropic constitutive relations for stress and hyperstress in terms of strain and strain-gradient are then obtained proving that these materials are characterized by seven elastic moduli and generalizing previous studies by Toupin, Mindlin and Sokolowski. Using a suitable decomposition of the strain-gradient, it is found a necessary and sufficient condition, to be verified by the elastic moduli, assuring positive definiteness of the stored elastic energy. The problem of warping in linear torsion of a prismatic second gradient cylinder is formulated, thus obtaining a possible measurement procedure for one of the second gradient elastic moduli.Comment: 20 page

    Eversion of bistable shells under magnetic actuation: A model of nonlinear shapes

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    We model in closed form a proven bistable shell made from a magnetic rubber composite material. In particular, we incorporate a non-axisymmetrical displacement field, and we capture the nonlinear coupling between the actuated shape and the magnetic flux distribution around the shell. We are able to verify the bistable nature of the shell and we explore its eversion during magnetic actuation. We show that axisymmetrical eversion is natural for a perfect shell but that non-axisymmetrical eversion rapidly emerges under very small initial imperfections, as observed in experiments and in a computational analysis. We confirm the non-uniform shapes of shell and we study the stability of eversion by considering how the landscape of total potential and magnetic energies of the system changes during actuation

    Continuum modelling of piezoelectromechanical truss beams: an application to vibration damping

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    Modal coupling in one-dimensional electro-mechanical structured continua

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    A passive continuously distributed control of mechanical vibrations is proposed. The piezoelectric actuators are interconnected by a linear electric transmission line. We introduce coupling and internal resonance criteria to determine the optimal choices for electric parameters. These criteria can be found decomposing the differential operator appearing in the linear evolutions according to a partition of the state vector into mechanical and electrical parts. The results we find allow for the design of an experimental set up
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