2,822 research outputs found

    Cohesive Dynamics and Brittle Fracture

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    We formulate a nonlocal cohesive model for calculating the deformation state inside a cracking body. In this model a more complete set of physical properties including elastic and softening behavior are assigned to each point in the medium. We work within the small deformation setting and use the peridynamic formulation. Here strains are calculated as difference quotients. The constitutive relation is given by a nonlocal cohesive law relating force to strain. At each instant of the evolution we identify a process zone where strains lie above a threshold value. Perturbation analysis shows that jump discontinuities within the process zone can become unstable and grow. We derive an explicit inequality that shows that the size of the process zone is controlled by the ratio given by the length scale of nonlocal interaction divided by the characteristic dimension of the sample. The process zone is shown to concentrate on a set of zero volume in the limit where the length scale of nonlocal interaction vanishes with respect to the size of the domain. In this limit the dynamic evolution is seen to have bounded linear elastic energy and Griffith surface energy. The limit dynamics corresponds to the simultaneous evolution of linear elastic displacement and the fracture set across which the displacement is discontinuous. We conclude illustrating how the approach developed here can be applied to limits of dynamics associated with other energies that Γ\Gamma- converge to the Griffith fracture energy.Comment: 38 pages, 4 figures, typographical errors corrected, removed section 7 of previous version and added section 8 to the current version, changed title to Cohesive Dynamics and Brittle Fracture. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1305.453

    Bloch Waves in Crystals and Periodic High Contrast Media

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    Analytic representation formulas and power series are developed describing the band structure inside periodic photonic and acoustic crystals made from high contrast inclusions. Central to this approach is the identification and utilization of a resonance spectrum for quasi-periodic source free modes. These modes are used to represent solution operators associated with electromagnetic and acoustic waves inside periodic high contrast media. Convergent power series for the Bloch wave spectrum is recovered from the representation formulas. Explicit conditions on the contrast are found that provide lower bounds on the convergence radius. These conditions are sufficient for the separation of spectral branches of the dispersion relation

    Tuning gain and bandwidth of traveling wave tubes using metamaterial beam-wave interaction structures

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    We employ metamaterial beam-wave interaction structures for tuning the gain and bandwidth of short traveling wave tubes. The interaction structures are made from metal rings of uniform cross section, which are periodically deployed along the length of the traveling wave tube. The aspect ratio of the ring cross sections are adjusted to control both gain and bandwidth. The frequency of operation is controlled by the filling fraction of the ring cross section with respect to the period

    Optimal lower bounds on the local stress inside random thermoelastic composites

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    A methodology is presented for bounding all higher moments of the local hydrostatic stress field inside random two phase linear thermoelastic media undergoing macroscopic thermomechanical loading. The method also provides a lower bound on the maximum local stress. Explicit formulas for the optimal lower bounds are found that are expressed in terms of the applied macro- scopic thermal and mechanical loading, coefficients of thermal expansion, elastic properties, and volume fractions. These bounds provide a means to measure load transfer across length scales relating the excursions of the local fields to the applied loads and the thermal stresses inside each phase. These bounds are shown to be the best possible in that they are attained by the Hashin-Shtrikman coated sphere assemblage.Comment: 14 page

    Optimal Local Approximation Spaces for Generalized Finite Element Methods with Application to Multiscale Problems

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    The paper addresses a numerical method for solving second order elliptic partial differential equations that describe fields inside heterogeneous media. The scope is general and treats the case of rough coefficients, i.e. coefficients with values in L∞(Ω)L^\infty(\Omega). This class of coefficients includes as examples media with micro-structure as well as media with multiple non-separated length scales. The approach taken here is based on the the generalized finite element method (GFEM) introduced in \cite{107}, and elaborated in \cite{102}, \cite{103} and \cite{104}. The GFEM is constructed by partitioning the computational domain Ω\Omega into to a collection of preselected subsets ωi,i=1,2,..m\omega_{i},i=1,2,..m and constructing finite dimensional approximation spaces Ψi\Psi_{i} over each subset using local information. The notion of the Kolmogorov nn-width is used to identify the optimal local approximation spaces. These spaces deliver local approximations with errors that decay almost exponentially with the degrees of freedom NiN_{i} in the energy norm over ωi\omega_i. The local spaces % \Psi_{i} are used within the GFEM scheme to produce a finite dimensional subspace SNS^N of H1(Ω)H^{1}(\Omega) which is then employed in the Galerkin method. It is shown that the error in the Galerkin approximation decays in the energy norm almost exponentially (i.e., super-algebraicly) with respect to the degrees of freedom NN. When length scales "`separate" and the microstructure is sufficiently fine with respect to the length scale of the domain ωi\omega_i it is shown that homogenization theory can be used to construct local approximation spaces with exponentially decreasing error in the pre-asymtotic regime.Comment: 30 pages, 6 figures, updated references, sections 3 and 4 typos corrected, minor text revision, results unchange

    Numerical convergence of nonlinear nonlocal continuum models to local elastodynamics

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    We quantify the numerical error and modeling error associated with replacing a nonlinear nonlocal bond-based peridynamic model with a local elasticity model or a linearized peridynamics model away from the fracture set. The nonlocal model treated here is characterized by a double well potential and is a smooth version of the peridynamic model introduced in n Silling (J Mech Phys Solids 48(1), 2000). The solutions of nonlinear peridynamics are shown to converge to the solution of linear elastodynamics at a rate linear with respect to the length scale ϵ\epsilon of non local interaction. This rate also holds for the convergence of solutions of the linearized peridynamic model to the solution of the local elastodynamic model. For local linear Lagrange interpolation the consistency error for the numerical approximation is found to depend on the ratio between mesh size hh and ϵ\epsilon. More generally for local Lagrange interpolation of order p≥1p\geq 1 the consistency error is of order hp/ϵh^p/\epsilon. A new stability theory for the time discretization is provided and an explicit generalization of the CFL condition on the time step and its relation to mesh size hh is given. Numerical simulations are provided illustrating the consistency error associated with the convergence of nonlinear and linearized peridynamics to linear elastodynamics

    Numerical convergence of finite difference approximations for state based peridynamic fracture models

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    In this work, we study the finite difference approximation for a class of nonlocal fracture models. The nonlocal model is initially elastic but beyond a critical strain the material softens with increasing strain. This model is formulated as a state-based perydynamic model using two potentials: one associated with hydrostatic strain and the other associated with tensile strain. We show that the dynamic evolution is well-posed in the space of H\"older continuous functions C0,γC^{0,\gamma} with H\"older exponent γ∈(0,1]\gamma \in (0,1]. Here the length scale of nonlocality is ϵ\epsilon, the size of time step is Δt\Delta t and the mesh size is hh. The finite difference approximations are seen to converge to the H\"older solution at the rate CtΔt+Cshγ/ϵ2C_t \Delta t + C_s h^\gamma/\epsilon^2 where the constants CtC_t and CsC_s are independent of the discretization. The semi-discrete approximations are found to be stable with time. We present numerical simulations for crack propagation that computationally verify the theoretically predicted convergence rate. We also present numerical simulations for crack propagation in precracked samples subject to a bending load.Comment: 42 pages, 11 figure

    Sub-Wavelength Plasmonic Crystals: Dispersion Relations and Effective Properties

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    We obtain a convergent power series expansion for the first branch of the dispersion relation for subwavelength plasmonic crystals consisting of plasmonic rods with frequency-dependent dielectric permittivity embedded in a host medium with unit permittivity. The expansion parameter is η=kd=2πd/λ\eta=kd=2\pi d/\lambda, where kk is the norm of a fixed wavevector, dd is the period of the crystal and λ\lambda is the wavelength, and the plasma frequency scales inversely to dd, making the dielectric permittivity in the rods large and negative. The expressions for the series coefficients (a.k.a., dynamic correctors) and the radius of convergence in η\eta are explicitly related to the solutions of higher-order cell problems and the geometry of the rods. Within the radius of convergence, we are able to compute the dispersion relation and the fields and define dynamic effective properties in a mathematically rigorous manner. Explicit error estimates show that a good approximation to the true dispersion relation is obtained using only a few terms of the expansion. The convergence proof requires the use of properties of the Catalan numbers to show that the series coefficients are exponentially bounded in the H1H^1 Sobolev norm

    Uncertain Loading and Quantifying Maximum Energy Concentration within Composite Structures

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    We introduce a systematic method for identifying the worst case load among all boundary loads of fixed energy. Here the worst case load is defined to be the one that delivers the largest fraction of input energy to a prescribed subdomain of interest. The worst case load is identified with the first eigenfunction of a suitably defined eigenvalue problem. The first eigenvalue for this problem is the maximum fraction of boundary energy that can be delivered to the subdomain. We compute worst case boundary loads and associated energy contained inside a prescribed subdomain through the numerical solution of the eigenvalue problem. We apply this computational method to bound the worst case load associated with an ensemble of random boundary loads given by a second order random process. Several examples are carried out on heterogeneous structures to illustrate the method
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