A limit elastic energy for the pure traction problem is derived from re-scaled nonlinear energies of a hyperelastic material body subject to an equilibrated force field. We prove that the strains of minimizing sequences associated to re-scaled nonlinear energies weakly converge, up to subsequences, to the strains of minimizers of a limit energy, provided an additional compatibility condition is fulfilled by the force field. The limit energy is different from the classical energy of linear elasticity; nevertheless, the compatibility condition entails the coincidence of related minima and minimizers. A strong violation of this condition provides a limit energy which is unbounded from below, while a mild violation may produce unboundedness of strains and a limit energy which has infinitely many extra minimizers which are not minimizers of standard linear elastic energy. A consequence of this analysis is that a rigorous validation of linear elasticity fails for compressive force fields that infringe up on such a compatibility condition.
The Gap Between Linear Elasticity and the Variational Limit of Finite Elasticity in Pure Traction Problems / Maddalena, Francesco; Percivale, Danilo; Tomarelli, Franco. - In: ARCHIVE FOR RATIONAL MECHANICS AND ANALYSIS. - ISSN 0003-9527. - STAMPA. - 234:3(2019), pp. 1091-1120. [10.1007/s00205-019-01408-2]
The Gap Between Linear Elasticity and the Variational Limit of Finite Elasticity in Pure Traction Problems
Francesco Maddalena;
2019-01-01
Abstract
A limit elastic energy for the pure traction problem is derived from re-scaled nonlinear energies of a hyperelastic material body subject to an equilibrated force field. We prove that the strains of minimizing sequences associated to re-scaled nonlinear energies weakly converge, up to subsequences, to the strains of minimizers of a limit energy, provided an additional compatibility condition is fulfilled by the force field. The limit energy is different from the classical energy of linear elasticity; nevertheless, the compatibility condition entails the coincidence of related minima and minimizers. A strong violation of this condition provides a limit energy which is unbounded from below, while a mild violation may produce unboundedness of strains and a limit energy which has infinitely many extra minimizers which are not minimizers of standard linear elastic energy. A consequence of this analysis is that a rigorous validation of linear elasticity fails for compressive force fields that infringe up on such a compatibility condition.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.