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Continuum mechanics is a branch of mechanics that deals with the deformation of and transmission of forces through materials modeled as a continuous medium (also called a continuum) rather than as discrete particles.
Continuum mechanics deals with deformable bodies, as opposed to rigid bodies. A continuum model assumes that the substance of the object completely fills the space it occupies. While ignoring the fact that matter is made of atoms, this provides a sufficiently accurate description of matter on length scales much greater than that of inter-atomic distances. The concept of a continuous medium allows for intuitive analysis of bulk matter by using differential equations that describe the behavior of such matter according to physical laws, such as mass conservation, momentum conservation, and energy conservation. Information about the specific material is expressed in constitutive relationships.
Continuum mechanics treats the physical properties of solids and fluids independently of any particular coordinate system in which they are observed. These properties are represented by tensors, which are mathematical objects with the salient property of being independent of coordinate systems. This permits definition of physical properties at any point in the continuum, according to mathematically convenient continuous functions. The theories of elasticity, plasticity and fluid mechanics are based on the concepts of continuum mechanics.
Concept of a continuum
The concept of a continuum underlies the mathematical framework for studying large-scale forces and deformations in materials. Although materials are composed of discrete atoms and molecules, separated by empty space or microscopic cracks and crystallographic defects, physical phenomena can often be modeled by considering a substance distributed throughout some region of space. A continuum is a body that can be continually sub-divided into infinitesimal elements with local material properties defined at any particular point. Properties of the bulk material can therefore be described by continuous functions, and their evolution can be studied using the mathematics of calculus.
Apart from the assumption of continuity, two other independent assumptions are often employed in the study of continuum mechanics. These are homogeneity (assumption of identical properties at all locations) and isotropy (assumption of directionally invariant vector properties). If these auxiliary assumptions are not globally applicable, the material may be segregated into sections where they are applicable in order to simplify the analysis. For more complex cases, one or both of these assumptions can be dropped. In these cases, computational methods are often used to solve the differential equations describing the evolution of material properties.
Major areas
Continuum mechanics The study of the physics of continuous materials | Solid mechanics The study of the physics of continuous materials with a defined rest shape. | Elasticity Describes materials that return to their rest shape after applied stresses are removed. | |
Plasticity Describes materials that permanently deform after a sufficient applied stress. | Rheology The study of materials with both solid and fluid characteristics. | ||
Fluid mechanics The study of the physics of continuous materials which deform when subjected to a force. | Non-Newtonian fluid Do not undergo strain rates proportional to the applied shear stress. | ||
Newtonian fluids undergo strain rates proportional to the applied shear stress. |
An additional area of continuum mechanics comprises elastomeric foams, which exhibit a curious hyperbolic stress-strain relationship. The elastomer is a true continuum, but a homogeneous distribution of voids gives it unusual properties.
Formulation of models
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Continuum mechanics models begin by assigning a region in three-dimensional Euclidean space to the material body being modeled. The points within this region are called particles or material points. Different configurations or states of the body correspond to different regions in Euclidean space. The region corresponding to the body's configuration at time
is labeled
.
A particular particle within the body in a particular configuration is characterized by a position vector
where are the coordinate vectors in some frame of reference chosen for the problem (See figure 1). This vector can be expressed as a function of the particle position
in some reference configuration, for example the configuration at the initial time, so that
This function needs to have various properties so that the model makes physical sense. needs to be:
- continuous in time, so that the body changes in a way which is realistic,
- globally invertible at all times, so that the body cannot intersect itself,
- orientation-preserving, as transformations which produce mirror reflections are not possible in nature.
For the mathematical formulation of the model, is also assumed to be twice continuously differentiable, so that differential equations describing the motion may be formulated.
Forces in a continuum
A solid is a deformable body that possesses shear strength, sc. a solid can support shear forces (forces parallel to the material surface on which they act). Fluids, on the other hand, do not sustain shear forces.
Following the classical dynamics of Newton and Euler, the motion of a material body is produced by the action of externally applied forces which are assumed to be of two kinds: surface forces and body forces
. Thus, the total force
applied to a body or to a portion of the body can be expressed as:
Surface forces
Surface forces or contact forces, expressed as force per unit area, can act either on the bounding surface of the body, as a result of mechanical contact with other bodies, or on imaginary internal surfaces that bound portions of the body, as a result of the mechanical interaction between the parts of the body to either side of the surface (Euler-Cauchy's stress principle). When a body is acted upon by external contact forces, internal contact forces are then transmitted from point to point inside the body to balance their action, according to Newton's third law of motion of conservation of linear momentum and angular momentum (for continuous bodies these laws are called the Euler's equations of motion). The internal contact forces are related to the body's deformation through constitutive equations. The internal contact forces may be mathematically described by how they relate to the motion of the body, independent of the body's material makeup.[citation needed]
The distribution of internal contact forces throughout the volume of the body is assumed to be continuous. Therefore, there exists a contact force density or Cauchy traction field that represents this distribution in a particular configuration of the body at a given time
. It is not a vector field because it depends not only on the position
of a particular material point, but also on the local orientation of the surface element as defined by its normal vector
.[page needed]
Any differential area with normal vector
of a given internal surface area
, bounding a portion of the body, experiences a contact force
arising from the contact between both portions of the body on each side of
, and it is given by
where is the surface traction, also called stress vector,traction,[page needed] or traction vector. The stress vector is a frame-indifferent vector (see Euler-Cauchy's stress principle).
The total contact force on the particular internal surface is then expressed as the sum (surface integral) of the contact forces on all differential surfaces
:
In continuum mechanics a body is considered stress-free if the only forces present are those inter-atomic forces (ionic, metallic, and van der Waals forces) required to hold the body together and to keep its shape in the absence of all external influences, including gravitational attraction. Stresses generated during manufacture of the body to a specific configuration are also excluded when considering stresses in a body. Therefore, the stresses considered in continuum mechanics are only those produced by deformation of the body, sc. only relative changes in stress are considered, not the absolute values of stress.
Body forces
Body forces are forces originating from sources outside of the body that act on the volume (or mass) of the body. Saying that body forces are due to outside sources implies that the interaction between different parts of the body (internal forces) are manifested through the contact forces alone. These forces arise from the presence of the body in force fields, e.g. gravitational field (gravitational forces) or electromagnetic field (electromagnetic forces), or from inertial forces when bodies are in motion. As the mass of a continuous body is assumed to be continuously distributed, any force originating from the mass is also continuously distributed. Thus, body forces are specified by vector fields which are assumed to be continuous over the entire volume of the body,i.e. acting on every point in it. Body forces are represented by a body force density (per unit of mass), which is a frame-indifferent vector field.
In the case of gravitational forces, the intensity of the force depends on, or is proportional to, the mass density of the material, and it is specified in terms of force per unit mass (
) or per unit volume (
). These two specifications are related through the material density by the equation
. Similarly, the intensity of electromagnetic forces depends upon the strength (electric charge) of the electromagnetic field.
The total body force applied to a continuous body is expressed as
Body forces and contact forces acting on the body lead to corresponding moments of force (torques) relative to a given point. Thus, the total applied torque about the origin is given by
In certain situations, not commonly considered in the analysis of the mechanical behavior of materials, it becomes necessary to include two other types of forces: these are couple stresses (surface couples, contact torques) and body moments. Couple stresses are moments per unit area applied on a surface. Body moments, or body couples, are moments per unit volume or per unit mass applied to the volume of the body. Both are important in the analysis of stress for a polarized dielectric solid under the action of an electric field, materials where the molecular structure is taken into consideration (e.g. bones), solids under the action of an external magnetic field, and the dislocation theory of metals.[page needed]
Materials that exhibit body couples and couple stresses in addition to moments produced exclusively by forces are called polar materials.[page needed]Non-polar materials are then those materials with only moments of forces. In the classical branches of continuum mechanics the development of the theory of stresses is based on non-polar materials.
Thus, the sum of all applied forces and torques (with respect to the origin of the coordinate system) in the body can be given by
Kinematics: motion and deformation
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A change in the configuration of a continuum body results in a displacement. The displacement of a body has two components: a rigid-body displacement and a deformation. A rigid-body displacement consists of a simultaneous translation and rotation of the body without changing its shape or size. Deformation implies the change in shape and/or size of the body from an initial or undeformed configuration to a current or deformed configuration
(Figure 2).
The motion of a continuum body is a continuous time sequence of displacements. Thus, the material body will occupy different configurations at different times so that a particle occupies a series of points in space which describe a path line.
There is continuity during motion or deformation of a continuum body in the sense that:
- The material points forming a closed curve at any instant will always form a closed curve at any subsequent time.
- The material points forming a closed surface at any instant will always form a closed surface at any subsequent time and the matter within the closed surface will always remain within.
It is convenient to identify a reference configuration or initial condition which all subsequent configurations are referenced from. The reference configuration need not be one that the body will ever occupy. Often, the configuration at is considered the reference configuration,
. The components
of the position vector
of a particle, taken with respect to the reference configuration, are called the material or reference coordinates.
When analyzing the motion or deformation of solids, or the flow of fluids, it is necessary to describe the sequence or evolution of configurations throughout time. One description for motion is made in terms of the material or referential coordinates, called material description or Lagrangian description.
Lagrangian description
In the Lagrangian description the position and physical properties of the particles are described in terms of the material or referential coordinates and time. In this case the reference configuration is the configuration at . An observer standing in the frame of reference observes the changes in the position and physical properties as the material body moves in space as time progresses. The results obtained are independent of the choice of initial time and reference configuration,
. This description is normally used in solid mechanics.
In the Lagrangian description, the motion of a continuum body is expressed by the mapping function (Figure 2),
which is a mapping of the initial configuration onto the current configuration
, giving a geometrical correspondence between them, i.e. giving the position vector
that a particle
, with a position vector
in the undeformed or reference configuration
, will occupy in the current or deformed configuration
at time
. The components
are called the spatial coordinates.
Physical and kinematic properties , i.e. thermodynamic properties and flow velocity, which describe or characterize features of the material body, are expressed as continuous functions of position and time, i.e.
.
The material derivative of any property of a continuum, which may be a scalar, vector, or tensor, is the time rate of change of that property for a specific group of particles of the moving continuum body. The material derivative is also known as the substantial derivative, or comoving derivative, or convective derivative. It can be thought as the rate at which the property changes when measured by an observer traveling with that group of particles.
In the Lagrangian description, the material derivative of is simply the partial derivative with respect to time, and the position vector
is held constant as it does not change with time. Thus, we have
The instantaneous position is a property of a particle, and its material derivative is the instantaneous flow velocity
of the particle. Therefore, the flow velocity field of the continuum is given by
Similarly, the acceleration field is given by
Continuity in the Lagrangian description is expressed by the spatial and temporal continuity of the mapping from the reference configuration to the current configuration of the material points. All physical quantities characterizing the continuum are described this way. In this sense, the function and
are single-valued and continuous, with continuous derivatives with respect to space and time to whatever order is required, usually to the second or third.
Eulerian description
Continuity allows for the inverse of to trace backwards where the particle currently located at
was located in the initial or referenced configuration
. In this case the description of motion is made in terms of the spatial coordinates, in which case is called the spatial description or Eulerian description, i.e. the current configuration is taken as the reference configuration.
The Eulerian description, introduced by d'Alembert, focuses on the current configuration , giving attention to what is occurring at a fixed point in space as time progresses, instead of giving attention to individual particles as they move through space and time. This approach is conveniently applied in the study of fluid flow where the kinematic property of greatest interest is the rate at which change is taking place rather than the shape of the body of fluid at a reference time.
Mathematically, the motion of a continuum using the Eulerian description is expressed by the mapping function
which provides a tracing of the particle which now occupies the position in the current configuration
to its original position
in the initial configuration
.
A necessary and sufficient condition for this inverse function to exist is that the determinant of the Jacobian matrix, often referred to simply as the Jacobian, should be different from zero. Thus,
In the Eulerian description, the physical properties are expressed as
where the functional form of in the Lagrangian description is not the same as the form of
in the Eulerian description.
The material derivative of , using the chain rule, is then
The first term on the right-hand side of this equation gives the local rate of change of the property occurring at position
. The second term of the right-hand side is the convective rate of change and expresses the contribution of the particle changing position in space (motion).
Continuity in the Eulerian description is expressed by the spatial and temporal continuity and continuous differentiability of the flow velocity field. All physical quantities are defined this way at each instant of time, in the current configuration, as a function of the vector position .
Displacement field
The vector joining the positions of a particle in the undeformed configuration and deformed configuration is called the displacement vector
, in the Lagrangian description, or
, in the Eulerian description.
A displacement field is a vector field of all displacement vectors for all particles in the body, which relates the deformed configuration with the undeformed configuration. It is convenient to do the analysis of deformation or motion of a continuum body in terms of the displacement field, In general, the displacement field is expressed in terms of the material coordinates as
or in terms of the spatial coordinates as
where are the direction cosines between the material and spatial coordinate systems with unit vectors
and
, respectively. Thus
and the relationship between and
is then given by
Knowing that
then
It is common to superimpose the coordinate systems for the undeformed and deformed configurations, which results in , and the direction cosines become Kronecker deltas, i.e.
Thus, we have
or in terms of the spatial coordinates as
Governing equations
Continuum mechanics deals with the behavior of materials that can be approximated as continuous for certain length and time scales. The equations that govern the mechanics of such materials include the balance laws for mass, momentum, and energy. Kinematic relations and constitutive equations are needed to complete the system of governing equations. Physical restrictions on the form of the constitutive relations can be applied by requiring that the second law of thermodynamics be satisfied under all conditions. In the continuum mechanics of solids, the second law of thermodynamics is satisfied if the Clausius–Duhem form of the entropy inequality is satisfied.
The balance laws express the idea that the rate of change of a quantity (mass, momentum, energy) in a volume must arise from three causes:
- the physical quantity itself flows through the surface that bounds the volume,
- there is a source of the physical quantity on the surface of the volume, or/and,
- there is a source of the physical quantity inside the volume.
Let be the body (an open subset of Euclidean space) and let
be its surface (the boundary of
).
Let the motion of material points in the body be described by the map
where is the position of a point in the initial configuration and
is the location of the same point in the deformed configuration.
The deformation gradient is given by
Balance laws
Let be a physical quantity that is flowing through the body. Let
be sources on the surface of the body and let
be sources inside the body. Let
be the outward unit normal to the surface
. Let
be the flow velocity of the physical particles that carry the physical quantity that is flowing. Also, let the speed at which the bounding surface
is moving be
(in the direction
).
Then, balance laws can be expressed in the general form
The functions ,
, and
can be scalar valued, vector valued, or tensor valued - depending on the physical quantity that the balance equation deals with. If there are internal boundaries in the body, jump discontinuities also need to be specified in the balance laws.
If we take the Eulerian point of view, it can be shown that the balance laws of mass, momentum, and energy for a solid can be written as (assuming the source term is zero for the mass and angular momentum equations)
In the above equations is the mass density (current),
is the material time derivative of
,
is the particle velocity,
is the material time derivative of
,
is the Cauchy stress tensor,
is the body force density,
is the internal energy per unit mass,
is the material time derivative of
,
is the heat flux vector, and
is an energy source per unit mass. The operators used are defined below.
With respect to the reference configuration (the Lagrangian point of view), the balance laws can be written as
In the above, is the first Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor, and
is the mass density in the reference configuration. The first Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor is related to the Cauchy stress tensor by
We can alternatively define the nominal stress tensor which is the transpose of the first Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor such that
Then the balance laws become
Operators
The operators in the above equations are defined as
where is a vector field,
is a second-order tensor field, and
are the components of an orthonormal basis in the current configuration. Also,
where is a vector field,
is a second-order tensor field, and
are the components of an orthonormal basis in the reference configuration.
The inner product is defined as
Clausius–Duhem inequality
The Clausius–Duhem inequality can be used to express the second law of thermodynamics for elastic-plastic materials. This inequality is a statement concerning the irreversibility of natural processes, especially when energy dissipation is involved.
Just like in the balance laws in the previous section, we assume that there is a flux of a quantity, a source of the quantity, and an internal density of the quantity per unit mass. The quantity of interest in this case is the entropy. Thus, we assume that there is an entropy flux, an entropy source, an internal mass density and an internal specific entropy (i.e. entropy per unit mass)
in the region of interest.
Let be such a region and let
be its boundary. Then the second law of thermodynamics states that the rate of increase of
in this region is greater than or equal to the sum of that supplied to
(as a flux or from internal sources) and the change of the internal entropy density
due to material flowing in and out of the region.
Let move with a flow velocity
and let particles inside
have velocities
. Let
be the unit outward normal to the surface
. Let
be the density of matter in the region,
be the entropy flux at the surface, and
be the entropy source per unit mass. Then the entropy inequality may be written as
The scalar entropy flux can be related to the vector flux at the surface by the relation . Under the assumption of incrementally isothermal conditions, we have
where is the heat flux vector,
is an energy source per unit mass, and
is the absolute temperature of a material point at
at time
.
We then have the Clausius–Duhem inequality in integral form:
We can show that the entropy inequality may be written in differential form as
In terms of the Cauchy stress and the internal energy, the Clausius–Duhem inequality may be written as
Validity
The validity of the continuum assumption may be verified by a theoretical analysis, in which either some clear periodicity is identified or statistical homogeneity and ergodicity of the microstructure exist. More specifically, the continuum hypothesis hinges on the concepts of a representative elementary volume and separation of scales based on the Hill–Mandel condition. This condition provides a link between an experimentalist's and a theoretician's viewpoint on constitutive equations (linear and nonlinear elastic/inelastic or coupled fields) as well as a way of spatial and statistical averaging of the microstructure. When the separation of scales does not hold, or when one wants to establish a continuum of a finer resolution than the size of the representative volume element (RVE), a statistical volume element (SVE) is employed, which results in random continuum fields. The latter then provide a micromechanics basis for stochastic finite elements (SFE). The levels of SVE and RVE link continuum mechanics to statistical mechanics. Experimentally, the RVE can only be evaluated when the constitutive response is spatially homogenous.
Applications
- Continuum mechanics
- Engineering
- Civil engineering
- Mechanical engineering
- Aerospace engineering
- Biomedical engineering
- Chemical engineering
See also
- Transport phenomena
- Bernoulli's principle
- Cauchy elastic material
- Configurational mechanics
- Curvilinear coordinates
- Equation of state
- Finite deformation tensors
- Finite strain theory
- Hyperelastic material
- Lagrangian and Eulerian specification of the flow field
- Movable cellular automaton
- Peridynamics (a non-local continuum theory leading to integral equations)
- Stress (physics)
- Stress measures
- Tensor calculus
- Tensor derivative (continuum mechanics)
- Theory of elasticity
- Knudsen number
Explanatory notes
- Maxwell pointed out that nonvanishing body moments exist in a magnet in a magnetic field and in a dielectric material in an electric field with different planes of polarization.
- Couple stresses and body couples were first explored by Voigt and Cosserat, and later reintroduced by Mindlin in 1960 on his work for Bell Labs on pure quartz crystals.[citation needed]
References
Citations
- Malvern 1969, p. 2.
- Dienes & Solem 1999, pp. 155–162.
- Smith 1993, p. 97.
- Smith 1993.
- Lubliner 2008.
- Liu 2002.
- Wu 2004.
- Fung 1977.
- Mase 1970.
- Atanackovic & Guran 2000.
- Irgens 2008.
- Chadwick 1999.
- Fung 1977, p. 76.
- Spencer 1980, p. 83.
Works cited
- Atanackovic, Teodor M.; Guran, Ardeshir (16 June 2000). Theory of Elasticity for Scientists and Engineers. Dover books on physics. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-0-8176-4072-9.
- Chadwick, Peter (1 January 1999). Continuum Mechanics: Concise Theory and Problems. Courier Corporation. ISBN 978-0-486-40180-5.
- Dienes, J. K.; Solem, J. C. (1999). "Nonlinear behavior of some hydrostatically stressed isotropic elastomeric foams". Acta Mechanica. 138 (3–4): 155–162. doi:10.1007/BF01291841. S2CID 120320672.
- Fung, Y. C. (1977). A First Course in Continuum Mechanics (2nd ed.). Prentice-Hall, Inc. ISBN 978-0-13-318311-5.
- Irgens, Fridtjov (10 January 2008). Continuum Mechanics. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-540-74298-2.
- Liu, I-Shih (28 May 2002). Continuum Mechanics. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-3-540-43019-3.
- Lubliner, Jacob (2008). Plasticity Theory (PDF) (Revised ed.). Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-46290-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2010.
- Ostoja-Starzewski, M. (2008). "7-10". Microstructural randomness and scaling in mechanics of materials. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-58488-417-0.
- Spencer, A. J. M. (1980). Continuum Mechanics. Longman Group Limited (London). p. 83. ISBN 978-0-582-44282-5.
- Roberts, A. J. (1994). A One-Dimensional Introduction to Continuum Mechanics. World Scientific.
- Smith, Donald R. (1993). "2". An introduction to continuum mechanics-after Truesdell and Noll. Solids mechanics and its applications. Vol. 22. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-90-481-4314-6.
- Wu, Han-Chin (20 December 2004). Continuum Mechanics and Plasticity. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-58488-363-0.
General references
- Batra, R. C. (2006). Elements of Continuum Mechanics. Reston, VA: AIAA.
- Bertram, Albrecht (2012). Elasticity and Plasticity of Large Deformations - An Introduction (Third ed.). Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-24615-9. ISBN 978-3-642-24615-9. S2CID 116496103.
- Chandramouli, P.N (2014). Continuum Mechanics. Yes Dee Publishing Pvt Ltd. ISBN 9789380381398. Archived from the original on 4 August 2018. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
- Eringen, A. Cemal (1980). Mechanics of Continua (2nd ed.). Krieger Pub Co. ISBN 978-0-88275-663-9.
- Chen, Youping; James D. Lee; Azim Eskandarian (2009). Meshless Methods in Solid Mechanics (First ed.). Springer New York. ISBN 978-1-4419-2148-2.
- Dill, Ellis Harold (2006). Continuum Mechanics: Elasticity, Plasticity, Viscoelasticity. Germany: CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8493-9779-0.
- Dimitrienko, Yuriy (2011). Nonlinear Continuum Mechanics and Large Inelastic Deformations. Germany: Springer. ISBN 978-94-007-0033-8.
- Hutter, Kolumban; Klaus Jöhnk (2004). Continuum Methods of Physical Modeling. Germany: Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-20619-4.
- Gurtin, M. E. (1981). An Introduction to Continuum Mechanics. New York: Academic Press.
- Lai, W. Michael; David Rubin; Erhard Krempl (1996). Introduction to Continuum Mechanics (3rd ed.). Elsevier, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7506-2894-5. Archived from the original on 6 February 2009.
- Lubarda, Vlado A. (2001). Elastoplasticity Theory. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8493-1138-3.
- Malvern, Lawrence E. (1969). Introduction to the mechanics of a continuous medium. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc.
- Mase, George E. (1970). Continuum Mechanics. McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 978-0-07-040663-6.
- Mase, G. Thomas; George E. Mase (1999). Continuum Mechanics for Engineers (Second ed.). CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8493-1855-9.
- Maugin, G. A. (1999). The Thermomechanics of Nonlinear Irreversible Behaviors: An Introduction. Singapore: World Scientific.
- Nemat-Nasser, Sia (2006). Plasticity: A Treatise on Finite Deformation of Heterogeneous Inelastic Materials. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83979-2.
- Ostoja-Starzewski, Martin (2008). Microstructural Randomness and Scaling in Mechanics of Materials. Boca Raton, FL: Chapman & Hall/CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-58488-417-0.
- Rees, David (2006). Basic Engineering Plasticity - An Introduction with Engineering and Manufacturing Applications. Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-7506-8025-7.
- Wright, T. W. (2002). The Physics and Mathematics of Adiabatic Shear Bands. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
External links
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- "Objectivity in classical continuum mechanics: Motions, Eulerian and Lagrangian functions; Deformation gradient; Lie derivatives; Velocity-addition formula, Coriolis; Objectivity" by Gilles Leborgne, April 7, 2021: "Part IV Velocity-addition formula and Objectivity"[permanent dead link ]
This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Continuum mechanics is a branch of mechanics that deals with the deformation of and transmission of forces through materials modeled as a continuous medium also called a continuum rather than as discrete particles Continuum mechanics deals with deformable bodies as opposed to rigid bodies A continuum model assumes that the substance of the object completely fills the space it occupies While ignoring the fact that matter is made of atoms this provides a sufficiently accurate description of matter on length scales much greater than that of inter atomic distances The concept of a continuous medium allows for intuitive analysis of bulk matter by using differential equations that describe the behavior of such matter according to physical laws such as mass conservation momentum conservation and energy conservation Information about the specific material is expressed in constitutive relationships Continuum mechanics treats the physical properties of solids and fluids independently of any particular coordinate system in which they are observed These properties are represented by tensors which are mathematical objects with the salient property of being independent of coordinate systems This permits definition of physical properties at any point in the continuum according to mathematically convenient continuous functions The theories of elasticity plasticity and fluid mechanics are based on the concepts of continuum mechanics Concept of a continuumThe concept of a continuum underlies the mathematical framework for studying large scale forces and deformations in materials Although materials are composed of discrete atoms and molecules separated by empty space or microscopic cracks and crystallographic defects physical phenomena can often be modeled by considering a substance distributed throughout some region of space A continuum is a body that can be continually sub divided into infinitesimal elements with local material properties defined at any particular point Properties of the bulk material can therefore be described by continuous functions and their evolution can be studied using the mathematics of calculus Apart from the assumption of continuity two other independent assumptions are often employed in the study of continuum mechanics These are homogeneity assumption of identical properties at all locations and isotropy assumption of directionally invariant vector properties If these auxiliary assumptions are not globally applicable the material may be segregated into sections where they are applicable in order to simplify the analysis For more complex cases one or both of these assumptions can be dropped In these cases computational methods are often used to solve the differential equations describing the evolution of material properties Major areasContinuum mechanics The study of the physics of continuous materials Solid mechanics The study of the physics of continuous materials with a defined rest shape Elasticity Describes materials that return to their rest shape after applied stresses are removed Plasticity Describes materials that permanently deform after a sufficient applied stress Rheology The study of materials with both solid and fluid characteristics Fluid mechanics The study of the physics of continuous materials which deform when subjected to a force Non Newtonian fluid Do not undergo strain rates proportional to the applied shear stress Newtonian fluids undergo strain rates proportional to the applied shear stress An additional area of continuum mechanics comprises elastomeric foams which exhibit a curious hyperbolic stress strain relationship The elastomer is a true continuum but a homogeneous distribution of voids gives it unusual properties Formulation of modelsFigure 1 Configuration of a continuum body Continuum mechanics models begin by assigning a region in three dimensional Euclidean space to the material body B displaystyle mathcal B being modeled The points within this region are called particles or material points Different configurations or states of the body correspond to different regions in Euclidean space The region corresponding to the body s configuration at time t displaystyle t is labeled kt B displaystyle kappa t mathcal B A particular particle within the body in a particular configuration is characterized by a position vector x i 13xiei displaystyle mathbf x sum i 1 3 x i mathbf e i where ei displaystyle mathbf e i are the coordinate vectors in some frame of reference chosen for the problem See figure 1 This vector can be expressed as a function of the particle position X displaystyle mathbf X in some reference configuration for example the configuration at the initial time so that x kt X displaystyle mathbf x kappa t mathbf X This function needs to have various properties so that the model makes physical sense kt displaystyle kappa t cdot needs to be continuous in time so that the body changes in a way which is realistic globally invertible at all times so that the body cannot intersect itself orientation preserving as transformations which produce mirror reflections are not possible in nature For the mathematical formulation of the model kt displaystyle kappa t cdot is also assumed to be twice continuously differentiable so that differential equations describing the motion may be formulated Forces in a continuumA solid is a deformable body that possesses shear strength sc a solid can support shear forces forces parallel to the material surface on which they act Fluids on the other hand do not sustain shear forces Following the classical dynamics of Newton and Euler the motion of a material body is produced by the action of externally applied forces which are assumed to be of two kinds surface forces FC displaystyle mathbf F C and body forces FB displaystyle mathbf F B Thus the total force F displaystyle mathcal F applied to a body or to a portion of the body can be expressed as F FC FB displaystyle mathcal F mathbf F C mathbf F B Surface forces Surface forces or contact forces expressed as force per unit area can act either on the bounding surface of the body as a result of mechanical contact with other bodies or on imaginary internal surfaces that bound portions of the body as a result of the mechanical interaction between the parts of the body to either side of the surface Euler Cauchy s stress principle When a body is acted upon by external contact forces internal contact forces are then transmitted from point to point inside the body to balance their action according to Newton s third law of motion of conservation of linear momentum and angular momentum for continuous bodies these laws are called the Euler s equations of motion The internal contact forces are related to the body s deformation through constitutive equations The internal contact forces may be mathematically described by how they relate to the motion of the body independent of the body s material makeup citation needed The distribution of internal contact forces throughout the volume of the body is assumed to be continuous Therefore there exists a contact force density or Cauchy traction fieldT n x t displaystyle mathbf T mathbf n mathbf x t that represents this distribution in a particular configuration of the body at a given time t displaystyle t It is not a vector field because it depends not only on the position x displaystyle mathbf x of a particular material point but also on the local orientation of the surface element as defined by its normal vector n displaystyle mathbf n page needed Any differential area dS displaystyle dS with normal vector n displaystyle mathbf n of a given internal surface area S displaystyle S bounding a portion of the body experiences a contact force dFC displaystyle d mathbf F C arising from the contact between both portions of the body on each side of S displaystyle S and it is given by dFC T n dS displaystyle d mathbf F C mathbf T mathbf n dS where T n displaystyle mathbf T mathbf n is the surface traction also called stress vector traction page needed or traction vector The stress vector is a frame indifferent vector see Euler Cauchy s stress principle The total contact force on the particular internal surface S displaystyle S is then expressed as the sum surface integral of the contact forces on all differential surfaces dS displaystyle dS FC ST n dS displaystyle mathbf F C int S mathbf T mathbf n dS In continuum mechanics a body is considered stress free if the only forces present are those inter atomic forces ionic metallic and van der Waals forces required to hold the body together and to keep its shape in the absence of all external influences including gravitational attraction Stresses generated during manufacture of the body to a specific configuration are also excluded when considering stresses in a body Therefore the stresses considered in continuum mechanics are only those produced by deformation of the body sc only relative changes in stress are considered not the absolute values of stress Body forces Body forces are forces originating from sources outside of the body that act on the volume or mass of the body Saying that body forces are due to outside sources implies that the interaction between different parts of the body internal forces are manifested through the contact forces alone These forces arise from the presence of the body in force fields e g gravitational field gravitational forces or electromagnetic field electromagnetic forces or from inertial forces when bodies are in motion As the mass of a continuous body is assumed to be continuously distributed any force originating from the mass is also continuously distributed Thus body forces are specified by vector fields which are assumed to be continuous over the entire volume of the body i e acting on every point in it Body forces are represented by a body force density b x t displaystyle mathbf b mathbf x t per unit of mass which is a frame indifferent vector field In the case of gravitational forces the intensity of the force depends on or is proportional to the mass density r x t displaystyle mathbf rho mathbf x t of the material and it is specified in terms of force per unit mass bi displaystyle b i or per unit volume pi displaystyle p i These two specifications are related through the material density by the equation rbi pi displaystyle rho b i p i Similarly the intensity of electromagnetic forces depends upon the strength electric charge of the electromagnetic field The total body force applied to a continuous body is expressed as FB Vbdm VrbdV displaystyle mathbf F B int V mathbf b dm int V rho mathbf b dV Body forces and contact forces acting on the body lead to corresponding moments of force torques relative to a given point Thus the total applied torque M displaystyle mathcal M about the origin is given by M MC MB displaystyle mathcal M mathbf M C mathbf M B In certain situations not commonly considered in the analysis of the mechanical behavior of materials it becomes necessary to include two other types of forces these are couple stresses surface couples contact torques and body moments Couple stresses are moments per unit area applied on a surface Body moments or body couples are moments per unit volume or per unit mass applied to the volume of the body Both are important in the analysis of stress for a polarized dielectric solid under the action of an electric field materials where the molecular structure is taken into consideration e g bones solids under the action of an external magnetic field and the dislocation theory of metals page needed Materials that exhibit body couples and couple stresses in addition to moments produced exclusively by forces are called polar materials page needed Non polar materials are then those materials with only moments of forces In the classical branches of continuum mechanics the development of the theory of stresses is based on non polar materials Thus the sum of all applied forces and torques with respect to the origin of the coordinate system in the body can be given by F Vadm STdS VrbdV displaystyle mathcal F int V mathbf a dm int S mathbf T dS int V rho mathbf b dV M Sr TdS Vr rbdV displaystyle mathcal M int S mathbf r times mathbf T dS int V mathbf r times rho mathbf b dV Kinematics motion and deformationFigure 2 Motion of a continuum body A change in the configuration of a continuum body results in a displacement The displacement of a body has two components a rigid body displacement and a deformation A rigid body displacement consists of a simultaneous translation and rotation of the body without changing its shape or size Deformation implies the change in shape and or size of the body from an initial or undeformed configuration k0 B displaystyle kappa 0 mathcal B to a current or deformed configuration kt B displaystyle kappa t mathcal B Figure 2 The motion of a continuum body is a continuous time sequence of displacements Thus the material body will occupy different configurations at different times so that a particle occupies a series of points in space which describe a path line There is continuity during motion or deformation of a continuum body in the sense that The material points forming a closed curve at any instant will always form a closed curve at any subsequent time The material points forming a closed surface at any instant will always form a closed surface at any subsequent time and the matter within the closed surface will always remain within It is convenient to identify a reference configuration or initial condition which all subsequent configurations are referenced from The reference configuration need not be one that the body will ever occupy Often the configuration at t 0 displaystyle t 0 is considered the reference configuration k0 B displaystyle kappa 0 mathcal B The components Xi displaystyle X i of the position vector X displaystyle mathbf X of a particle taken with respect to the reference configuration are called the material or reference coordinates When analyzing the motion or deformation of solids or the flow of fluids it is necessary to describe the sequence or evolution of configurations throughout time One description for motion is made in terms of the material or referential coordinates called material description or Lagrangian description Lagrangian description In the Lagrangian description the position and physical properties of the particles are described in terms of the material or referential coordinates and time In this case the reference configuration is the configuration at t 0 displaystyle t 0 An observer standing in the frame of reference observes the changes in the position and physical properties as the material body moves in space as time progresses The results obtained are independent of the choice of initial time and reference configuration k0 B displaystyle kappa 0 mathcal B This description is normally used in solid mechanics In the Lagrangian description the motion of a continuum body is expressed by the mapping function x displaystyle chi cdot Figure 2 x x X t displaystyle mathbf x chi mathbf X t which is a mapping of the initial configuration k0 B displaystyle kappa 0 mathcal B onto the current configuration kt B displaystyle kappa t mathcal B giving a geometrical correspondence between them i e giving the position vector x xiei displaystyle mathbf x x i mathbf e i that a particle X displaystyle X with a position vector X displaystyle mathbf X in the undeformed or reference configuration k0 B displaystyle kappa 0 mathcal B will occupy in the current or deformed configuration kt B displaystyle kappa t mathcal B at time t displaystyle t The components xi displaystyle x i are called the spatial coordinates Physical and kinematic properties Pij displaystyle P ij ldots i e thermodynamic properties and flow velocity which describe or characterize features of the material body are expressed as continuous functions of position and time i e Pij Pij X t displaystyle P ij ldots P ij ldots mathbf X t The material derivative of any property Pij displaystyle P ij ldots of a continuum which may be a scalar vector or tensor is the time rate of change of that property for a specific group of particles of the moving continuum body The material derivative is also known as the substantial derivative or comoving derivative or convective derivative It can be thought as the rate at which the property changes when measured by an observer traveling with that group of particles In the Lagrangian description the material derivative of Pij displaystyle P ij ldots is simply the partial derivative with respect to time and the position vector X displaystyle mathbf X is held constant as it does not change with time Thus we have ddt Pij X t t Pij X t displaystyle frac d dt P ij ldots mathbf X t frac partial partial t P ij ldots mathbf X t The instantaneous position x displaystyle mathbf x is a property of a particle and its material derivative is the instantaneous flow velocity v displaystyle mathbf v of the particle Therefore the flow velocity field of the continuum is given by v x dxdt x X t t displaystyle mathbf v dot mathbf x frac d mathbf x dt frac partial chi mathbf X t partial t Similarly the acceleration field is given by a v x d2xdt2 2x X t t2 displaystyle mathbf a dot mathbf v ddot mathbf x frac d 2 mathbf x dt 2 frac partial 2 chi mathbf X t partial t 2 Continuity in the Lagrangian description is expressed by the spatial and temporal continuity of the mapping from the reference configuration to the current configuration of the material points All physical quantities characterizing the continuum are described this way In this sense the function x displaystyle chi cdot and Pij displaystyle P ij ldots cdot are single valued and continuous with continuous derivatives with respect to space and time to whatever order is required usually to the second or third Eulerian description Continuity allows for the inverse of x displaystyle chi cdot to trace backwards where the particle currently located at x displaystyle mathbf x was located in the initial or referenced configuration k0 B displaystyle kappa 0 mathcal B In this case the description of motion is made in terms of the spatial coordinates in which case is called the spatial description or Eulerian description i e the current configuration is taken as the reference configuration The Eulerian description introduced by d Alembert focuses on the current configuration kt B displaystyle kappa t mathcal B giving attention to what is occurring at a fixed point in space as time progresses instead of giving attention to individual particles as they move through space and time This approach is conveniently applied in the study of fluid flow where the kinematic property of greatest interest is the rate at which change is taking place rather than the shape of the body of fluid at a reference time Mathematically the motion of a continuum using the Eulerian description is expressed by the mapping function X x 1 x t displaystyle mathbf X chi 1 mathbf x t which provides a tracing of the particle which now occupies the position x displaystyle mathbf x in the current configuration kt B displaystyle kappa t mathcal B to its original position X displaystyle mathbf X in the initial configuration k0 B displaystyle kappa 0 mathcal B A necessary and sufficient condition for this inverse function to exist is that the determinant of the Jacobian matrix often referred to simply as the Jacobian should be different from zero Thus J xi XJ xi XJ 0 displaystyle J left frac partial chi i partial X J right left frac partial x i partial X J right neq 0 In the Eulerian description the physical properties Pij displaystyle P ij ldots are expressed as Pij Pij X t Pij x 1 x t t pij x t displaystyle P ij ldots P ij ldots mathbf X t P ij ldots chi 1 mathbf x t t p ij ldots mathbf x t where the functional form of Pij displaystyle P ij ldots in the Lagrangian description is not the same as the form of pij displaystyle p ij ldots in the Eulerian description The material derivative of pij x t displaystyle p ij ldots mathbf x t using the chain rule is then ddt pij x t t pij x t xk pij x t dxkdt displaystyle frac d dt p ij ldots mathbf x t frac partial partial t p ij ldots mathbf x t frac partial partial x k p ij ldots mathbf x t frac dx k dt The first term on the right hand side of this equation gives the local rate of change of the property pij x t displaystyle p ij ldots mathbf x t occurring at position x displaystyle mathbf x The second term of the right hand side is the convective rate of change and expresses the contribution of the particle changing position in space motion Continuity in the Eulerian description is expressed by the spatial and temporal continuity and continuous differentiability of the flow velocity field All physical quantities are defined this way at each instant of time in the current configuration as a function of the vector position x displaystyle mathbf x Displacement field The vector joining the positions of a particle P displaystyle P in the undeformed configuration and deformed configuration is called the displacement vector u X t uiei displaystyle mathbf u mathbf X t u i mathbf e i in the Lagrangian description or U x t UJEJ displaystyle mathbf U mathbf x t U J mathbf E J in the Eulerian description A displacement field is a vector field of all displacement vectors for all particles in the body which relates the deformed configuration with the undeformed configuration It is convenient to do the analysis of deformation or motion of a continuum body in terms of the displacement field In general the displacement field is expressed in terms of the material coordinates as u X t b x X t Xorui aiJbJ xi aiJXJ displaystyle mathbf u mathbf X t mathbf b mathbf x mathbf X t mathbf X qquad text or qquad u i alpha iJ b J x i alpha iJ X J or in terms of the spatial coordinates as U x t b x X x t orUJ bJ aJixi XJ displaystyle mathbf U mathbf x t mathbf b mathbf x mathbf X mathbf x t qquad text or qquad U J b J alpha Ji x i X J where aJi displaystyle alpha Ji are the direction cosines between the material and spatial coordinate systems with unit vectors EJ displaystyle mathbf E J and ei displaystyle mathbf e i respectively Thus EJ ei aJi aiJ displaystyle mathbf E J cdot mathbf e i alpha Ji alpha iJ and the relationship between ui displaystyle u i and UJ displaystyle U J is then given by ui aiJUJorUJ aJiui displaystyle u i alpha iJ U J qquad text or qquad U J alpha Ji u i Knowing that ei aiJEJ displaystyle mathbf e i alpha iJ mathbf E J then u X t uiei ui aiJEJ UJEJ U x t displaystyle mathbf u mathbf X t u i mathbf e i u i alpha iJ mathbf E J U J mathbf E J mathbf U mathbf x t It is common to superimpose the coordinate systems for the undeformed and deformed configurations which results in b 0 displaystyle mathbf b 0 and the direction cosines become Kronecker deltas i e EJ ei dJi diJ displaystyle mathbf E J cdot mathbf e i delta Ji delta iJ Thus we have u X t x X t Xorui xi diJXJ displaystyle mathbf u mathbf X t mathbf x mathbf X t mathbf X qquad text or qquad u i x i delta iJ X J or in terms of the spatial coordinates as U x t x X x t orUJ dJixi XJ displaystyle mathbf U mathbf x t mathbf x mathbf X mathbf x t qquad text or qquad U J delta Ji x i X J Governing equationsContinuum mechanics deals with the behavior of materials that can be approximated as continuous for certain length and time scales The equations that govern the mechanics of such materials include the balance laws for mass momentum and energy Kinematic relations and constitutive equations are needed to complete the system of governing equations Physical restrictions on the form of the constitutive relations can be applied by requiring that the second law of thermodynamics be satisfied under all conditions In the continuum mechanics of solids the second law of thermodynamics is satisfied if the Clausius Duhem form of the entropy inequality is satisfied The balance laws express the idea that the rate of change of a quantity mass momentum energy in a volume must arise from three causes the physical quantity itself flows through the surface that bounds the volume there is a source of the physical quantity on the surface of the volume or and there is a source of the physical quantity inside the volume Let W displaystyle Omega be the body an open subset of Euclidean space and let W displaystyle partial Omega be its surface the boundary of W displaystyle Omega Let the motion of material points in the body be described by the map x x X x X displaystyle mathbf x boldsymbol chi mathbf X mathbf x mathbf X where X displaystyle mathbf X is the position of a point in the initial configuration and x displaystyle mathbf x is the location of the same point in the deformed configuration The deformation gradient is given by F x X x displaystyle boldsymbol F frac partial mathbf x partial mathbf X nabla mathbf x Balance laws Let f x t displaystyle f mathbf x t be a physical quantity that is flowing through the body Let g x t displaystyle g mathbf x t be sources on the surface of the body and let h x t displaystyle h mathbf x t be sources inside the body Let n x t displaystyle mathbf n mathbf x t be the outward unit normal to the surface W displaystyle partial Omega Let v x t displaystyle mathbf v mathbf x t be the flow velocity of the physical particles that carry the physical quantity that is flowing Also let the speed at which the bounding surface W displaystyle partial Omega is moving be un displaystyle u n in the direction n displaystyle mathbf n Then balance laws can be expressed in the general form ddt Wf x t dV Wf x t un x t v x t n x t dA Wg x t dA Wh x t dV displaystyle cfrac d dt left int Omega f mathbf x t text dV right int partial Omega f mathbf x t u n mathbf x t mathbf v mathbf x t cdot mathbf n mathbf x t text dA int partial Omega g mathbf x t text dA int Omega h mathbf x t text dV The functions f x t displaystyle f mathbf x t g x t displaystyle g mathbf x t and h x t displaystyle h mathbf x t can be scalar valued vector valued or tensor valued depending on the physical quantity that the balance equation deals with If there are internal boundaries in the body jump discontinuities also need to be specified in the balance laws If we take the Eulerian point of view it can be shown that the balance laws of mass momentum and energy for a solid can be written as assuming the source term is zero for the mass and angular momentum equations r r v 0Balance of Massr v s r b 0Balance of Linear Momentum Cauchy s first law of motion s sTBalance of Angular Momentum Cauchy s second law of motion r e s v q r s 0Balance of Energy displaystyle begin aligned dot rho rho boldsymbol nabla cdot mathbf v amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Mass rho dot mathbf v boldsymbol nabla cdot boldsymbol sigma rho mathbf b amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Linear Momentum Cauchy s first law of motion boldsymbol sigma amp boldsymbol sigma T amp amp qquad text Balance of Angular Momentum Cauchy s second law of motion rho dot e boldsymbol sigma boldsymbol nabla mathbf v boldsymbol nabla cdot mathbf q rho s amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Energy end aligned In the above equations r x t displaystyle rho mathbf x t is the mass density current r displaystyle dot rho is the material time derivative of r displaystyle rho v x t displaystyle mathbf v mathbf x t is the particle velocity v displaystyle dot mathbf v is the material time derivative of v displaystyle mathbf v s x t displaystyle boldsymbol sigma mathbf x t is the Cauchy stress tensor b x t displaystyle mathbf b mathbf x t is the body force density e x t displaystyle e mathbf x t is the internal energy per unit mass e displaystyle dot e is the material time derivative of e displaystyle e q x t displaystyle mathbf q mathbf x t is the heat flux vector and s x t displaystyle s mathbf x t is an energy source per unit mass The operators used are defined below With respect to the reference configuration the Lagrangian point of view the balance laws can be written as r det F r0 0Balance of Massr0 x P r0 b 0Balance of Linear MomentumF PT P FTBalance of Angular Momentumr0 e PT F q r0 s 0Balance of Energy displaystyle begin aligned rho det boldsymbol F rho 0 amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Mass rho 0 ddot mathbf x boldsymbol nabla circ cdot boldsymbol P rho 0 mathbf b amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Linear Momentum boldsymbol F cdot boldsymbol P T amp boldsymbol P cdot boldsymbol F T amp amp qquad text Balance of Angular Momentum rho 0 dot e boldsymbol P T dot boldsymbol F boldsymbol nabla circ cdot mathbf q rho 0 s amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Energy end aligned In the above P displaystyle boldsymbol P is the first Piola Kirchhoff stress tensor and r0 displaystyle rho 0 is the mass density in the reference configuration The first Piola Kirchhoff stress tensor is related to the Cauchy stress tensor by P J s F T where J det F displaystyle boldsymbol P J boldsymbol sigma cdot boldsymbol F T text where J det boldsymbol F We can alternatively define the nominal stress tensor N displaystyle boldsymbol N which is the transpose of the first Piola Kirchhoff stress tensor such that N PT J F 1 s displaystyle boldsymbol N boldsymbol P T J boldsymbol F 1 cdot boldsymbol sigma Then the balance laws become r det F r0 0Balance of Massr0 x NT r0 b 0Balance of Linear MomentumF N NT FTBalance of Angular Momentumr0 e N F q r0 s 0Balance of Energy displaystyle begin aligned rho det boldsymbol F rho 0 amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Mass rho 0 ddot mathbf x boldsymbol nabla circ cdot boldsymbol N T rho 0 mathbf b amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Linear Momentum boldsymbol F cdot boldsymbol N amp boldsymbol N T cdot boldsymbol F T amp amp qquad text Balance of Angular Momentum rho 0 dot e boldsymbol N dot boldsymbol F boldsymbol nabla circ cdot mathbf q rho 0 s amp 0 amp amp qquad text Balance of Energy end aligned Operators The operators in the above equations are defined as v i j 13 vi xjei ej vi jei ej v i 13 vi xi vi i S i j 13 Sij xj ei sij j ei displaystyle begin aligned boldsymbol nabla mathbf v amp sum i j 1 3 frac partial v i partial x j mathbf e i otimes mathbf e j v i j mathbf e i otimes mathbf e j 1ex boldsymbol nabla cdot mathbf v amp sum i 1 3 frac partial v i partial x i v i i 1ex boldsymbol nabla cdot boldsymbol S amp sum i j 1 3 frac partial S ij partial x j mathbf e i sigma ij j mathbf e i end aligned where v displaystyle mathbf v is a vector field S displaystyle boldsymbol S is a second order tensor field and ei displaystyle mathbf e i are the components of an orthonormal basis in the current configuration Also v i j 13 vi XjEi Ej vi jEi Ej v i 13 vi Xi vi i S i j 13 Sij Xj Ei Sij j Ei displaystyle begin aligned boldsymbol nabla circ mathbf v amp sum i j 1 3 frac partial v i partial X j mathbf E i otimes mathbf E j v i j mathbf E i otimes mathbf E j 1ex boldsymbol nabla circ cdot mathbf v amp sum i 1 3 frac partial v i partial X i v i i 1ex boldsymbol nabla circ cdot boldsymbol S amp sum i j 1 3 frac partial S ij partial X j mathbf E i S ij j mathbf E i end aligned where v displaystyle mathbf v is a vector field S displaystyle boldsymbol S is a second order tensor field and Ei displaystyle mathbf E i are the components of an orthonormal basis in the reference configuration The inner product is defined as A B i j 13Aij Bij trace ABT displaystyle boldsymbol A boldsymbol B sum i j 1 3 A ij B ij operatorname trace boldsymbol A boldsymbol B T Clausius Duhem inequality The Clausius Duhem inequality can be used to express the second law of thermodynamics for elastic plastic materials This inequality is a statement concerning the irreversibility of natural processes especially when energy dissipation is involved Just like in the balance laws in the previous section we assume that there is a flux of a quantity a source of the quantity and an internal density of the quantity per unit mass The quantity of interest in this case is the entropy Thus we assume that there is an entropy flux an entropy source an internal mass density r displaystyle rho and an internal specific entropy i e entropy per unit mass h displaystyle eta in the region of interest Let W displaystyle Omega be such a region and let W displaystyle partial Omega be its boundary Then the second law of thermodynamics states that the rate of increase of h displaystyle eta in this region is greater than or equal to the sum of that supplied to W displaystyle Omega as a flux or from internal sources and the change of the internal entropy density rh displaystyle rho eta due to material flowing in and out of the region Let W displaystyle partial Omega move with a flow velocity un displaystyle u n and let particles inside W displaystyle Omega have velocities v displaystyle mathbf v Let n displaystyle mathbf n be the unit outward normal to the surface W displaystyle partial Omega Let r displaystyle rho be the density of matter in the region q displaystyle bar q be the entropy flux at the surface and r displaystyle r be the entropy source per unit mass Then the entropy inequality may be written as ddt Wr h dV Wr h un v n dA Wq dA Wr r dV displaystyle cfrac d dt left int Omega rho eta text dV right geq int partial Omega rho eta u n mathbf v cdot mathbf n text dA int partial Omega bar q text dA int Omega rho r text dV The scalar entropy flux can be related to the vector flux at the surface by the relation q ps x n displaystyle bar q boldsymbol psi mathbf x cdot mathbf n Under the assumption of incrementally isothermal conditions we have ps x q x T r sT displaystyle boldsymbol psi mathbf x cfrac mathbf q mathbf x T r cfrac s T where q displaystyle mathbf q is the heat flux vector s displaystyle s is an energy source per unit mass and T displaystyle T is the absolute temperature of a material point at x displaystyle mathbf x at time t displaystyle t We then have the Clausius Duhem inequality in integral form ddt Wr h dV Wr h un v n dA Wq nT dA Wr sT dV displaystyle cfrac d dt left int Omega rho eta text dV right geq int partial Omega rho eta u n mathbf v cdot mathbf n text dA int partial Omega cfrac mathbf q cdot mathbf n T text dA int Omega cfrac rho s T text dV We can show that the entropy inequality may be written in differential form as r h qT r sT displaystyle rho dot eta geq boldsymbol nabla cdot left cfrac mathbf q T right cfrac rho s T In terms of the Cauchy stress and the internal energy the Clausius Duhem inequality may be written as r e T h s v q TT displaystyle rho dot e T dot eta boldsymbol sigma boldsymbol nabla mathbf v leq cfrac mathbf q cdot boldsymbol nabla T T ValidityThe validity of the continuum assumption may be verified by a theoretical analysis in which either some clear periodicity is identified or statistical homogeneity and ergodicity of the microstructure exist More specifically the continuum hypothesis hinges on the concepts of a representative elementary volume and separation of scales based on the Hill Mandel condition This condition provides a link between an experimentalist s and a theoretician s viewpoint on constitutive equations linear and nonlinear elastic inelastic or coupled fields as well as a way of spatial and statistical averaging of the microstructure When the separation of scales does not hold or when one wants to establish a continuum of a finer resolution than the size of the representative volume element RVE a statistical volume element SVE is employed which results in random continuum fields The latter then provide a micromechanics basis for stochastic finite elements SFE The levels of SVE and RVE link continuum mechanics to statistical mechanics Experimentally the RVE can only be evaluated when the constitutive response is spatially homogenous ApplicationsContinuum mechanics Solid mechanics Fluid mechanics Engineering Civil engineering Mechanical engineering Aerospace engineering Biomedical engineering Chemical engineeringSee alsoTransport phenomena Bernoulli s principle Cauchy elastic material Configurational mechanics Curvilinear coordinates Equation of state Finite deformation tensors Finite strain theory Hyperelastic material Lagrangian and Eulerian specification of the flow field Movable cellular automaton Peridynamics a non local continuum theory leading to integral equations Stress physics Stress measures Tensor calculus Tensor derivative continuum mechanics Theory of elasticity Knudsen numberExplanatory notesMaxwell pointed out that nonvanishing body moments exist in a magnet in a magnetic field and in a dielectric material in an electric field with different planes of polarization Couple stresses and body couples were first explored by Voigt and Cosserat and later reintroduced by Mindlin in 1960 on his work for Bell Labs on pure quartz crystals citation needed ReferencesCitations Malvern 1969 p 2 Dienes amp Solem 1999 pp 155 162 Smith 1993 p 97 Smith 1993 Lubliner 2008 Liu 2002 Wu 2004 Fung 1977 Mase 1970 Atanackovic amp Guran 2000 Irgens 2008 Chadwick 1999 Fung 1977 p 76 Spencer 1980 p 83 Works cited Atanackovic Teodor M Guran Ardeshir 16 June 2000 Theory of Elasticity for Scientists and Engineers Dover books on physics Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 0 8176 4072 9 Chadwick Peter 1 January 1999 Continuum Mechanics Concise Theory and Problems Courier Corporation ISBN 978 0 486 40180 5 Dienes J K Solem J C 1999 Nonlinear behavior of some hydrostatically stressed isotropic elastomeric foams Acta Mechanica 138 3 4 155 162 doi 10 1007 BF01291841 S2CID 120320672 Fung Y C 1977 A First Course in Continuum Mechanics 2nd ed Prentice Hall Inc ISBN 978 0 13 318311 5 Irgens Fridtjov 10 January 2008 Continuum Mechanics Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 3 540 74298 2 Liu I Shih 28 May 2002 Continuum Mechanics Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 3 540 43019 3 Lubliner Jacob 2008 Plasticity Theory PDF Revised ed Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 46290 5 Archived from the original PDF on 31 March 2010 Ostoja Starzewski M 2008 7 10 Microstructural randomness and scaling in mechanics of materials CRC Press ISBN 978 1 58488 417 0 Spencer A J M 1980 Continuum Mechanics Longman Group Limited London p 83 ISBN 978 0 582 44282 5 Roberts A J 1994 A One Dimensional Introduction to Continuum Mechanics World Scientific Smith Donald R 1993 2 An introduction to continuum mechanics after Truesdell and Noll Solids mechanics and its applications Vol 22 Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 90 481 4314 6 Wu Han Chin 20 December 2004 Continuum Mechanics and Plasticity Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 58488 363 0 General references Batra R C 2006 Elements of Continuum Mechanics Reston VA AIAA Bertram Albrecht 2012 Elasticity and Plasticity of Large Deformations An Introduction Third ed Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 642 24615 9 ISBN 978 3 642 24615 9 S2CID 116496103 Chandramouli P N 2014 Continuum Mechanics Yes Dee Publishing Pvt Ltd ISBN 9789380381398 Archived from the original on 4 August 2018 Retrieved 24 March 2014 Eringen A Cemal 1980 Mechanics of Continua 2nd ed Krieger Pub Co ISBN 978 0 88275 663 9 Chen Youping James D Lee Azim Eskandarian 2009 Meshless Methods in Solid Mechanics First ed Springer New York ISBN 978 1 4419 2148 2 Dill Ellis Harold 2006 Continuum Mechanics Elasticity Plasticity Viscoelasticity Germany CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 9779 0 Dimitrienko Yuriy 2011 Nonlinear Continuum Mechanics and Large Inelastic Deformations Germany Springer ISBN 978 94 007 0033 8 Hutter Kolumban Klaus Johnk 2004 Continuum Methods of Physical Modeling Germany Springer ISBN 978 3 540 20619 4 Gurtin M E 1981 An Introduction to Continuum Mechanics New York Academic Press Lai W Michael David Rubin Erhard Krempl 1996 Introduction to Continuum Mechanics 3rd ed Elsevier Inc ISBN 978 0 7506 2894 5 Archived from the original on 6 February 2009 Lubarda Vlado A 2001 Elastoplasticity Theory CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 1138 3 Malvern Lawrence E 1969 Introduction to the mechanics of a continuous medium New Jersey Prentice Hall Inc Mase George E 1970 Continuum Mechanics McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 978 0 07 040663 6 Mase G Thomas George E Mase 1999 Continuum Mechanics for Engineers Second ed CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 1855 9 Maugin G A 1999 The Thermomechanics of Nonlinear Irreversible Behaviors An Introduction Singapore World Scientific Nemat Nasser Sia 2006 Plasticity A Treatise on Finite Deformation of Heterogeneous Inelastic Materials Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83979 2 Ostoja Starzewski Martin 2008 Microstructural Randomness and Scaling in Mechanics of Materials Boca Raton FL Chapman amp Hall CRC Press ISBN 978 1 58488 417 0 Rees David 2006 Basic Engineering Plasticity An Introduction with Engineering and Manufacturing Applications Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 7506 8025 7 Wright T W 2002 The Physics and Mathematics of Adiabatic Shear Bands Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Continuum mechanics Objectivity in classical continuum mechanics Motions Eulerian and Lagrangian functions Deformation gradient Lie derivatives Velocity addition formula Coriolis Objectivity by Gilles Leborgne April 7 2021 Part IV Velocity addition formula and Objectivity permanent dead link