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Membrane analogy for multi-material bars under torsion
Author(s) -
Laura Galuppi,
Gianni RoyerCarfagni
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society a mathematical physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2946
pISSN - 1364-5021
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.2019.0124
Subject(s) - torsion (gastropod) , isotropy , finite element method , stiffness , analogy , shear modulus , bar (unit) , inverse , homogeneous , physics , mechanics , materials science , mathematical analysis , classical mechanics , structural engineering , geometry , mathematics , composite material , engineering , statistical physics , medicine , linguistics , philosophy , surgery , quantum mechanics , meteorology
Prandtl's membrane analogy for the torsion problem of prismatic homogeneous bars is extended to multi-material cross sections. The linear elastic problem is governed by the same equations describing the deformation of an inflated membrane, differently tensioned in regions that correspond to the domains hosting different materials in the bar cross section, in a way proportional to the inverse of the material shear modulus. Multi-connected cross sections correspond to materials with vanishing stiffness inside the holes, implying infinite tension in the corresponding portions of the membrane. To define the interface constrains that allow to apply such a state of prestress to the membrane, a physical apparatus is proposed, which can be numerically modelled with a two-dimensional mesh implementable in commercial finite-element model codes. This approach presents noteworthy advantages with respect to the three-dimensional modelling of the twisted bar.

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