Title: VARIOUS ISSUES IN THE LARGE STRAIN THEORY OF TRUSSES
1VARIOUS ISSUES IN THE LARGE STRAIN THEORY OF
TRUSSES
C. A. Kaklamanis and K.V. Spiliopoulos Department
of Civil Engineering National Technical
University of Athens
STAMM 2006 Symposium on Trends in Applications of
Mathematics to Mechanics Vienna, Austria, 1014
July 2006
2OUTLINE
- INTRODUCTION
- Manifold View of the Truss and Embeddings
- KINEMATICS
- Notation and Point Transformation
- The Deformation Gradient and its (Diagonal) Polar
Decomposition - Various Strain Measures
- The Velocity Gradient and the Deformation and
Spin Tensors - Various Strain Rates
- CONSTITUTIVE MODELING
- Strain Energy Rate and Strain Energy Density Rate
- Conjugate Stress and Strain Measures
- A Linear, Hyperelastic Model and Constitutive
Transformations - The Strain Energy and the Finite Element
Methodology - AN EXAMPLE
- CONCLUDING REMARKS
3INTRODUCTION (Manifold View of the Truss and
Embeddings)
- Mathematically, view the truss as a 3D
differentiable manifold. - Use three parameters for particle identification,
(s1, s2, s3). - The truss manifold consists of the s1 and the s2
s3 submanifolds. - To make observations, we consider embeddings of
the truss submanifolds. - An acceptable embedding is denoted by mC, with m
being some possible configuration labeling, such
that m 0 is the natural reference
configuration. All quantities associated with a
given configuration obtain the corresponding left
superscript. - We postulate that
- Acceptable embeddings of the s1 submanifold
correspond to straight line segments with length
mL. - Acceptable embeddings of the s2 s3 submanifold
correspond to bounded plane areas being normal to
the embedded s1 line. - To describe this area, we need two linearly
independent vectors (not necessarily orthogonal)
that span it, while being normal to the unit
vector that lies along the s1 line.
4KINEMATICS (Notation and Point Transformation)
- To develop the truss kinematics, consider the
truss in two different configurations as shown in
the Figure - Note that and are
not necessarily orthogonal pairs. - We will use n y or m z for these pairs when they
are not orthogonal and x otherwise. - F represents the transformation relating mC with
nC. This is the transformation that we want to
find.
X3
nx1
F
j
nC
mx2
nX(j)
nx2
mx3
nx3
mC
j
mx1 Local Frames
i
mX(i)
mX(j)
i
nX(i)
X2 Global Frame
mXs(nx1)
nXs(nx1)
X1
5KINEMATICS (Notation and Point Transformation)
- Consider a free vector a. Its representation in
some frame ? is denoted as a?. We have that - a? R? aX
- where R? is the transformation relating the ?
and X components of a. - With reference to the previous figure, we find
that - (1)
-
- where
- nL and mL are the truss lengths in each
configuration. n?y and m?z are the norms of the
n y ,m z vector pairs used to span the trusss
cross section in each configuration. - Bold subscripts denote the vector pairs used to
describe the trusss cross section. -
6KINEMATICS (The Deformation Gradient)
- Equation (1) is a point mapping, telling us how
points in nC transform to point in mC. - To describe truss deformations, we need to know
how line elements transform. - A line element is a vector, bound to some point
of the embedded manifold, that connects this
point with some point that is infinitesimally
close to it. - Mathematically, a line element is a vector
belonging to the manifolds tangent space. - By (1), we get by differentiation, that
-
(2) - where and are line elements
of the truss in nC and mC respectively. - is known as the deformation gradient.
- By (2) and (1), we see that points and line
elements transform from one configuration to
another in exactly the same way, i.e. via the
deformation gradient.
7KINEMATICS (The Polar Decomposition of the
Deformation Gradient)
- The deformation gradient contains all the
kinematic information necessary to describe the
motion of the truss. - In order to uncover the building blocks of this
motion, we polar decompose it, getting - (3)
-
- where R is an orthogonal matrix representing a
3D rotation of the truss and U and V are
symmetric, positive definite matrices. - There are three types of second order tensors
Eulerian, Lagrangian and mixed type (or two
point) for which the mC only, the nC only, or
both configurations are related. - Clearly, F and R are two point tensors, whereas
U is Lagrangian and V Eulerian. - We would like to find the conditions under which,
U or V are intrinsically diagonal, since this is
a great simplification. - These conditions have to do with the vector pairs
used to describe the trusss cross section, as
well as with the frames used in the various
representations.
8KINEMATICS (Conditions for Intrinsically Diagonal
U and V Matrices)
- We find that
- where
-
- (Note two eigenvalues only)
- Note that the z y subscript, indicates that the
non orthogonal mz pair used to span the trusss
cross section in mC, is related to the ny pair
used to span the trusss cross section in nC, via
the following - Note that nyo and mzo used in the
representations, are the orthogonal frames
corresponding to the orthogonal rotation part of
the polar decomposition of the non orthogonal
matrix relating the ny and mz frames with the X
frame.
9KINEMATICS (Conditions for Intrinsically Diagonal
U and V Matrices)
- Similarly, when orthogonal pairs are used for the
description of the trusss cross section (denoted
by use of x subscript), as well as the
corresponding frames for the representations, we
get - where
- Note that here we have three distinct eigenvalues
as opposed to the non orthogonal pairs case
where we had only two. - It can be shown that the conditions for diagonal
U or V amount to succeeding in having the
Eulerian counterparts of U equaling the
Lagrangian counterparts of V where the Eulerian
counterpart of U is given by - By these relations, we find that the trusss
motion consists of a series of transformations
that can take place in any order a rigid body
rotation given by R and a deformation involving
stretching in three directions, described by ?.
10KINEMATICS (Various Strain Measures)
- Our concern lies in describing the deformation
portion of the trusss motion. Hence, we must use
? to do that. (In the following we assume
orthogonal vector pairs only). - A quite general way of doing this, is by means of
Seths strain measures - (4)
- Where k , -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, . E is a
Lagrangian tensor, whereas e is the Eulerian
counterpart of E. - The strain measures in (4) (all equally
plausible), measure the deformation experienced
by the truss in going from the reference nC to
the current mC configuration. - For k 1, we get the Biot strain, or corrotated
engineering. For k 2, we get the Green
Lagrange strain, for k -2 we get the Almansi
strain, whereas for k -1, we get the Hyperbolic
strain. - For k 0, we get , known as the Lagrangian and
Eulerian Logarithmic (or Hencky) strains
respectively.
11KINEMATICS (The Velocity Gradient and the
Deformation and Spin Tensor)
- The rate of change of change of the trusss
velocity with respect to position, is the
velocity gradient mL. - We let the following
-
-
- where
- We find that
- where
- are the deformation (symmetric part of mL) and
spin tensors (antisymmetric part of mL) - The Lagrangian counterpart of md is
- We are now able to calculate the strain rates
12KINEMATICS (Various Strain Rates)
- The material rates of the various strain measures
are found to be - For k 0, note that we get the material rates of
the Logarithmic strains to be identical with the
corresponding rates of deformation, a result that
is not true in general, but only in cases where
the principal directions of U and V remain fixed. - The material rates are not objective. An
objective rate is Jaumanns rate, given by - When k 0 and a is the corrotating or the
reference local frame, we get that - This result is a special case of a more general
one given by Xiao in 1997, where it is shown that
the Logarithmic rate of the Eulerian Logarithmic
strain is identical to the Eulerian rate of
deformation. For the truss, we find that it is
the Jaumanns rate is identical to Xiaos
Logarithmic rate.
13CONSTITUTIVE MODELING (Strain Energy Strain
Energy Density Rate )