Title: en31 intro lect
1Conservation Laws for Continua
Mass Conservation
Linear Momentum Conservation
Angular Momentum Conservation
2Work-Energy Relations
Rate of mechanical work done on a material volume
Conservation laws in terms of other stresses
Mechanical work in terms of other stresses
3Principle of Virtual Work (alternative statement
of BLM)
If
for all
Then
on
4Thermodynamics
Temperature
Specific Internal Energy Specific Helmholtz free
energy
Heat flux vector
External heat flux
Specific entropy
First Law of Thermodynamics
Second Law of Thermodynamics
5Transformations under observer changes
Transformation of space under a change of observer
All physically measurable vectors can be regarded
as connecting two points in the inertial frame
These must therefore transform like vectors
connecting two points under a change of observer
Note that time derivatives in the observers
reference frame have to account for rotation of
the reference frame
6Some Transformations under observer changes
7Some Transformations under observer changes
Objective (frame indifferent) tensors map a
vector from the observed (inertial) frame back
onto the inertial frame
Invariant tensors map a vector from the
reference configuration back onto the reference
configuration
Mixed tensors map a vector from the reference
configuration onto the inertial frame
8Constitutive Laws
Equations relating internal force measures to
deformation measures are knownas Constitutive
Relations
- General Assumptions
- Local homogeneity of deformation
- (a deformation gradient can always be
calculated) - Principle of local action
- (stress at a point depends on deformation
in a vanishingly small material element
surrounding the point) - Restrictions on constitutive relations
- 1. Material Frame Indifference
stress-strain relations must transform
consistently under a change of observer - 2. Constitutive law must always satisfy
the second law of - thermodynamics for any possible
deformation/temperature history.
9Fluids
- Properties of fluids
- No natural reference configuration
- Support no shear stress when at rest
- Kinematics
- Only need variables that dont dependon ref.
config - Conservation Laws
10General Constitutive Models for Fluids
Objectivity and dissipation inequality show that
constitutive relations must have form
Internal Energy Entropy Free Energy Stress
response function Heat flux response function
In addition, the constitutive relations must
satisfy
where
11Constitutive Models for Fluids
Elastic Fluid
Ideal Gas
Newtonian Viscous
Non-Newtonian
12Derived Field Equations for Newtonian Fluids
Unknowns
Must always satisfy mass conservation
Combine BLM With constitutive law. Also recall
Compressible Navier-Stokes
With density indep viscosity
For an incompressible Newtonianviscous fluid
Incompressibility reduces mass balance to
For an elastic fluid (Euler eq)
13Derived Field Equations for Fluids
Recall vorticity vector
Vorticity transport equation (constant
temperature, density independent viscosity)
For an elastic fluid
For an incompressible fluid
If flow of an ideal fluid is irrotational at t0
and body forces are curl free, then flow remains
irrotational for all time (Potential flow)
14Derived field equations for fluids
For an elastic fluid
along streamline
For irrotational flow
everywhere
For incompressible fluid
15Normalizing the Navier-Stokes equation
Incompressible Navier-Stokes
Normalize as
Reynolds number
Euler number
Strouhal number
Froude number
16Limiting cases most frequently used
Ideal flow
Stokes flow
17Governing equations for a control volume (review)
Solving fluids problems control volume approach
18Example
Steady 2D flow, ideal fluid Calculate the force
acting on the wall Take surrounding pressure to
be zero
19Exact solutions potential flow
If flow irrotational at t0, remains
irrotational Bernoulli holds everywhere
Irrotational curl(v)0 so
Mass cons
Bernoulli
20Exact solutions Stokes Flow
Steady laminar viscous flow between plates Assume
constant pressure gradient in horizontal direction
Solve subject to boundary conditions
21Exact Solutions Acoustics
Assumptions Small amplitude pressure and density
fluctuations Irrotational flow Negligible heat
flow
Approximate N-S as
For small perturbations
Mass conservation
Combine
(Wave equation)
22Wave speed in an ideal gas
Assume heat flow can be neglected
Entropy equation
so
Hence
23Application of continuum mechanics to elasticity
Material characterized by
24General structure of constitutive relations
Frame indifference, dissipation inequality
25Forms of constitutive relation used in literature
26Specific forms for free energy function
- Generalized polynomial function
27Solving problems for elastic materials
(spherical/axial symmetry)
- Assume incompressiblility
(gives ODE for p(r)
28Linearized field equations for elastic materials
- Approximations
- Linearized kinematics
- All stress measures equal
- Linearize stress-strain relation
Elastic constants related to strain energy/unit
vol
Isotropic materials
29Elastic materials with isotropy
30Solving linear elasticity problems
spherical/axial symmetry
31Some simple static linear elasticity solutions
Navier equation
Potential Representation (statics)
Point force in an infinite solid
Point force normal to a surface
32Simple linear elastic solutions
Spherical cavity in infinite solid under remote
stress
33Dynamic elasticity solutions
Plane wave solution
Navier equation
Solutions