92 research outputs found
A New CNT-Oriented Shell Theory
A theory of linearly elastic orthotropic shells is presented, with potential
application to the continuous modeling of Carbon NanoTubes. Two relevant
features are: the selected type of orthotropic response, which should be
suitable to capture differences in chirality; the possibility of accounting for
thickness changes due to changes in inter-wall separation to be expected in
multi-wall CNTs. A simpler version of the theory is also proposed, in which
orthotropy is preserved but thickness changes are excluded, intended for
possible application to single-wall CNTs. Another feature of both versions of
the present theory is boundary-value problems of torsion, axial traction,
uniform inner pressure, and rim flexure, can be solved explicitly in closed
form. Various directions of ongoing further research are indicated
Configurational balances via variational arguments
A simple variational argument is presented, yielding the balances of configurational forces both in bulk and at a singular surface in the context of finite elasticity. It is shown that the former balance is equivalent to the bulk balance of standard forces; and that the latter balance has instead a physical content which is partly independent of the balance of standard forces at the singular surface
Energy Splitting Theorems for Materials with Memory
We extend to materials with fading memory and materials with internal
variables a result previously established by one of us for materials with
instantaneous memory: the additive decomposability of the total energy into an
internal and a kinetic part, and a representation of the latter and the
inertial forces in terms of one and the same mass tensor
On shear and torsion factors in the theory of linearly elastic rods
Lower bounds for the factors entering the standard notions of shear and
torsion stiffness for a linearly elastic rod are established in a new and
simple way. The proofs are based on the following criterion to identify the
stiffness parameters entering rod theory: the rod's stored-energy density per
unit length expressed in terms of force and moment resultants should equal the
stored-energy density per unit length expressed in terms of stress components
of a Saint-Venant cylinder subject to either flexure or torsion, according to
the case. It is shown that the shear factor is always greater than one,
whatever the cross section, a fact that is customarily stated without proof in
textbooks of structure mechanics; and that the torsion factor is also greater
than one, except when the cross section is a circle or a circular annulus, a
fact that is usually proved making use of Saint-Venant's solution in terms of
displacement components.Comment: 1 figur
Well-posedness and long-time behavior for a nonstandard viscous Cahn-Hilliard system
We study a diffusion model of phase field type, consisting of a system of two
partial differential equations encoding the balances of microforces and
microenergy; the two unknowns are the order parameter and the chemical
potential. By a careful development of uniform estimates and the deduction of
certain useful boundedness properties, we prove existence and uniqueness of a
global-in-time smooth solution to the associated initial/boundary-value
problem; moreover, we give a description of the relative omega-limit set.Comment: Key words: Cahn-Hilliard equation, phase field model, well-posedness,
long-time behavio
- …