The rotation polar(F)∈SO(3) arises as the unique orthogonal
factor of the right polar decomposition F=polar(F)⋅U of a given
invertible matrix F∈GL+(3). In the context of nonlinear elasticity
Grioli (1940) discovered a geometric variational characterization of polar(F) as a unique energy-minimizing rotation. In preceding works, we have
analyzed a generalization of Grioli's variational approach with weights
(material parameters) μ>0 and μc≥0 (Grioli: μ=μc). The
energy subject to minimization coincides with the Cosserat shear-stretch
contribution arising in any geometrically nonlinear, isotropic and quadratic
Cosserat continuum model formulated in the deformation gradient field F:=∇φ:Ω→GL+(3) and the microrotation field R:Ω→SO(3). The corresponding set of non-classical energy-minimizing
rotations rpolarμ,μc±(F):=argminR∈SO(3){Wμ,μc(R;F):=μ∣∣sym(RTF−1)∣∣2+μc∣∣skew(RTF−1)∣∣2} represents a new relaxed-polar mechanism.
Our goal is to motivate this mechanism by presenting it in a relevant setting.
To this end, we explicitly construct a deformation mapping φnano
which models an idealized nanoindentation and compare the corresponding optimal
rotation patterns rpolar1,0±(Fnano) with experimentally
obtained 3D-EBSD measurements of the disorientation angle of lattice rotations
due to a nanoindentation in solid copper. We observe that the non-classical
relaxed-polar mechanism can produce interesting counter-rotations. A possible
link between Cosserat theory and finite multiplicative plasticity theory on
small scales is also explored.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figure