Solution of St.-Venant's and Almansi-Michell's Problems

We use the semi-inverse method to solve a St. Venant and an Almansi-Michell problem for a prismatic body made of a homogeneous and isotropic elastic material that is stress free in the reference configuration. In the St. Venant problem, only the end faces of the prismatic body are loaded by a set of...

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Main Author: Placidi, Luca
Other Authors: Engineering Science and Mechanics
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/35451
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10212002-043618/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-354512020-09-26T05:37:27Z Solution of St.-Venant's and Almansi-Michell's Problems Placidi, Luca Engineering Science and Mechanics Bates, Robert C. Morris, Don H. Henneke, Edmund G. II Polynomial hypothesis Saint-Venant's Problem Linear Elasticity Non Linear Elasticity Stressed Reference Configuration Clebsch hypothesis We use the semi-inverse method to solve a St. Venant and an Almansi-Michell problem for a prismatic body made of a homogeneous and isotropic elastic material that is stress free in the reference configuration. In the St. Venant problem, only the end faces of the prismatic body are loaded by a set of self-equilibrated forces. In the Almansi-Michell problem self equilibrated surface tractions are also applied on the mantle of the body. The St. Venant problem is also analyzed for the following two cases: (i) the reference configuration is subjected to a hydrostatic pressure, and (ii) stress-strain relations contain terms that are quadratic in displacement gradients. The Signorini method is also used to analyze the St. Venant problem. Both for the St. Venant and the Almansi-Michell problems, the solution of the three dimensional problem is reduced to that of solving a sequence of two dimensional problems. For the St. Venant problem involving a second-order elastic material, the first order deformation is assumed to be an infinitesimal twist. In the solution of the Almansi-Michell problem, surface tractions on the mantle of the cylindrical body are expressed as a polynomial in the axial coordinate. When solving the problem by the semi-inverse method, displacements are also expressed as a polynomial in the axial coordinate. An explicit solution is obtained for a hollow circular cylindrical body with surface tractions on the mantle given by an affine function of the axial coordinate Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:46:53Z 2014-03-14T20:46:53Z 2002-05-02 2002-10-21 2003-10-24 2002-10-24 Thesis etd-10212002-043618 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/35451 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10212002-043618/ lplacidithesismod.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Polynomial hypothesis
Saint-Venant's Problem
Linear Elasticity
Non Linear Elasticity
Stressed Reference Configuration
Clebsch hypothesis
spellingShingle Polynomial hypothesis
Saint-Venant's Problem
Linear Elasticity
Non Linear Elasticity
Stressed Reference Configuration
Clebsch hypothesis
Placidi, Luca
Solution of St.-Venant's and Almansi-Michell's Problems
description We use the semi-inverse method to solve a St. Venant and an Almansi-Michell problem for a prismatic body made of a homogeneous and isotropic elastic material that is stress free in the reference configuration. In the St. Venant problem, only the end faces of the prismatic body are loaded by a set of self-equilibrated forces. In the Almansi-Michell problem self equilibrated surface tractions are also applied on the mantle of the body. The St. Venant problem is also analyzed for the following two cases: (i) the reference configuration is subjected to a hydrostatic pressure, and (ii) stress-strain relations contain terms that are quadratic in displacement gradients. The Signorini method is also used to analyze the St. Venant problem. Both for the St. Venant and the Almansi-Michell problems, the solution of the three dimensional problem is reduced to that of solving a sequence of two dimensional problems. For the St. Venant problem involving a second-order elastic material, the first order deformation is assumed to be an infinitesimal twist. In the solution of the Almansi-Michell problem, surface tractions on the mantle of the cylindrical body are expressed as a polynomial in the axial coordinate. When solving the problem by the semi-inverse method, displacements are also expressed as a polynomial in the axial coordinate. An explicit solution is obtained for a hollow circular cylindrical body with surface tractions on the mantle given by an affine function of the axial coordinate === Master of Science
author2 Engineering Science and Mechanics
author_facet Engineering Science and Mechanics
Placidi, Luca
author Placidi, Luca
author_sort Placidi, Luca
title Solution of St.-Venant's and Almansi-Michell's Problems
title_short Solution of St.-Venant's and Almansi-Michell's Problems
title_full Solution of St.-Venant's and Almansi-Michell's Problems
title_fullStr Solution of St.-Venant's and Almansi-Michell's Problems
title_full_unstemmed Solution of St.-Venant's and Almansi-Michell's Problems
title_sort solution of st.-venant's and almansi-michell's problems
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/35451
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-10212002-043618/
work_keys_str_mv AT placidiluca solutionofstvenantsandalmansimichellsproblems
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