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Deformation (physics)

In physics, deformation is the continuum mechanics transformation of a body from a reference configuration to a current configuration.[1] A configuration is a set containing the positions of all particles of the body.

The deformation of a thin straight rod into a closed loop. The length of the rod remains almost unchanged during the deformation, which indicates that the strain is small. In this particular case of bending, displacements associated with rigid translations and rotations of material elements in the rod are much greater than displacements associated with straining.

A deformation can occur because of external loads,[2] intrinsic activity (e.g. muscle contraction), body forces (such as gravity or electromagnetic forces), or changes in temperature, moisture content, or chemical reactions, etc.

Strain is related to deformation in terms of relative displacement of particles in the body that excludes rigid-body motions. Different equivalent choices may be made for the expression of a strain field depending on whether it is defined with respect to the initial or the final configuration of the body and on whether the metric tensor or its dual is considered.

In a continuous body, a deformation field results from a stress field due to applied forces or because of some changes in the temperature field of the body. The relation between stress and strain is expressed by constitutive equations, e.g., Hooke's law for linear elastic materials. Deformations which cease to exist after the stress field is removed are termed as elastic deformation. In this case, the continuum completely recovers its original configuration. On the other hand, irreversible deformations remain. They exist even after stresses have been removed. One type of irreversible deformation is plastic deformation, which occurs in material bodies after stresses have attained a certain threshold value known as the elastic limit or yield stress, and are the result of slip, or dislocation mechanisms at the atomic level. Another type of irreversible deformation is viscous deformation, which is the irreversible part of viscoelastic deformation.

In the case of elastic deformations, the response function linking strain to the deforming stress is the compliance tensor of the material.

Strain

Strain represents the displacement between particles in the body relative to a reference length.

Deformation of a body is expressed in the form x = F(X) where X is the reference position of material points of the body. Such a measure does not distinguish between rigid body motions (translations and rotations) and changes in shape (and size) of the body. A deformation has units of length.

We could, for example, define strain to be

 
where I is the identity tensor. Hence strains are dimensionless and are usually expressed as a decimal fraction, a percentage or in parts-per notation. Strains measure how much a given deformation differs locally from a rigid-body deformation.[3]

A strain is in general a tensor quantity. Physical insight into strains can be gained by observing that a given strain can be decomposed into normal and shear components. The amount of stretch or compression along material line elements or fibers is the normal strain, and the amount of distortion associated with the sliding of plane layers over each other is the shear strain, within a deforming body.[4] This could be applied by elongation, shortening, or volume changes, or angular distortion.[5]

The state of strain at a material point of a continuum body is defined as the totality of all the changes in length of material lines or fibers, the normal strain, which pass through that point and also the totality of all the changes in the angle between pairs of lines initially perpendicular to each other, the shear strain, radiating from this point. However, it is sufficient to know the normal and shear components of strain on a set of three mutually perpendicular directions.

If there is an increase in length of the material line, the normal strain is called tensile strain, otherwise, if there is reduction or compression in the length of the material line, it is called compressive strain.

Strain measures

Depending on the amount of strain, or local deformation, the analysis of deformation is subdivided into three deformation theories:

  • Finite strain theory, also called large strain theory, large deformation theory, deals with deformations in which both rotations and strains are arbitrarily large. In this case, the undeformed and deformed configurations of the continuum are significantly different and a clear distinction has to be made between them. This is commonly the case with elastomers, plastically-deforming materials and other fluids and biological soft tissue.
  • Infinitesimal strain theory, also called small strain theory, small deformation theory, small displacement theory, or small displacement-gradient theory where strains and rotations are both small. In this case, the undeformed and deformed configurations of the body can be assumed identical. The infinitesimal strain theory is used in the analysis of deformations of materials exhibiting elastic behavior, such as materials found in mechanical and civil engineering applications, e.g. concrete and steel.
  • Large-displacement or large-rotation theory, which assumes small strains but large rotations and displacements.

In each of these theories the strain is then defined differently. The engineering strain is the most common definition applied to materials used in mechanical and structural engineering, which are subjected to very small deformations. On the other hand, for some materials, e.g., elastomers and polymers, subjected to large deformations, the engineering definition of strain is not applicable, e.g. typical engineering strains greater than 1%,[6] thus other more complex definitions of strain are required, such as stretch, logarithmic strain, Green strain, and Almansi strain.

Engineering strain

Engineering strain, also known as Cauchy strain, is expressed as the ratio of total deformation to the initial dimension of the material body on which forces are applied. The engineering normal strain or engineering extensional strain or nominal strain e of a material line element or fiber axially loaded is expressed as the change in length ΔL per unit of the original length L of the line element or fibers. The normal strain is positive if the material fibers are stretched and negative if they are compressed. Thus, we have

 
where e is the engineering normal strain, L is the original length of the fiber and l is the final length of the fiber. Measures of strain are often expressed in parts per million or microstrains.

The true shear strain is defined as the change in the angle (in radians) between two material line elements initially perpendicular to each other in the undeformed or initial configuration. The engineering shear strain is defined as the tangent of that angle, and is equal to the length of deformation at its maximum divided by the perpendicular length in the plane of force application which sometimes makes it easier to calculate.

Stretch ratio

The stretch ratio or extension ratio is a measure of the extensional or normal strain of a differential line element, which can be defined at either the undeformed configuration or the deformed configuration. It is defined as the ratio between the final length l and the initial length L of the material line.

 

The extension ratio is approximately related to the engineering strain by

 

This equation implies that the normal strain is zero, so that there is no deformation when the stretch is equal to unity.

The stretch ratio is used in the analysis of materials that exhibit large deformations, such as elastomers, which can sustain stretch ratios of 3 or 4 before they fail. On the other hand, traditional engineering materials, such as concrete or steel, fail at much lower stretch ratios.

True strain

The logarithmic strain ε, also called, true strain or Hencky strain.[7] Considering an incremental strain (Ludwik)

 
the logarithmic strain is obtained by integrating this incremental strain:
 
where e is the engineering strain. The logarithmic strain provides the correct measure of the final strain when deformation takes place in a series of increments, taking into account the influence of the strain path.[4]

Green strain

The Green strain is defined as:

 

Almansi strain

The Euler-Almansi strain is defined as

 

Normal and shear strain

 
Two-dimensional geometric deformation of an infinitesimal material element.

Strains are classified as either normal or shear. A normal strain is perpendicular to the face of an element, and a shear strain is parallel to it. These definitions are consistent with those of normal stress and shear stress.

Normal strain

For an isotropic material that obeys Hooke's law, a normal stress will cause a normal strain. Normal strains produce dilations.

Consider a two-dimensional, infinitesimal, rectangular material element with dimensions dx × dy, which, after deformation, takes the form of a rhombus. The deformation is described by the displacement field u. From the geometry of the adjacent figure we have

 
and
 
For very small displacement gradients the square of the derivative of   are negligible and we have
 
The normal strain in the x-direction of the rectangular element is defined by
 
Similarly, the normal strain in the y- and z-directions becomes
 

Shear strain

Shear strain
Common symbols
γ or ε
SI unit1, or radian
Derivations from
other quantities
γ = τ/G

The engineering shear strain (γxy) is defined as the change in angle between lines AC and AB. Therefore,

 

From the geometry of the figure, we have

 
For small displacement gradients we have
 
For small rotations, i.e. α and β are ≪ 1 we have tan αα, tan ββ. Therefore,
 
thus
 
By interchanging x and y and ux and uy, it can be shown that γxy = γyx.

Similarly, for the yz- and xz-planes, we have

 

The tensorial shear strain components of the infinitesimal strain tensor can then be expressed using the engineering strain definition, γ, as

 

Metric tensor

A strain field associated with a displacement is defined, at any point, by the change in length of the tangent vectors representing the speeds of arbitrarily parametrized curves passing through that point. A basic geometric result, due to Fréchet, von Neumann and Jordan, states that, if the lengths of the tangent vectors fulfil the axioms of a norm and the parallelogram law, then the length of a vector is the square root of the value of the quadratic form associated, by the polarization formula, with a positive definite bilinear map called the metric tensor.

Description of deformation

Deformation is the change in the metric properties of a continuous body, meaning that a curve drawn in the initial body placement changes its length when displaced to a curve in the final placement. If none of the curves changes length, it is said that a rigid body displacement occurred.

It is convenient to identify a reference configuration or initial geometric state of the continuum body which all subsequent configurations are referenced from. The reference configuration need not be one the body actually will ever occupy. Often, the configuration at t = 0 is considered the reference configuration, κ0(B). The configuration at the current time t is the current configuration.

For deformation analysis, the reference configuration is identified as undeformed configuration, and the current configuration as deformed configuration. Additionally, time is not considered when analyzing deformation, thus the sequence of configurations between the undeformed and deformed configurations are of no interest.

The components Xi of the position vector X of a particle in the reference configuration, taken with respect to the reference coordinate system, are called the material or reference coordinates. On the other hand, the components xi of the position vector x of a particle in the deformed configuration, taken with respect to the spatial coordinate system of reference, are called the spatial coordinates

There are two methods for analysing the deformation of a continuum. One description is made in terms of the material or referential coordinates, called material description or Lagrangian description. A second description of deformation is made in terms of the spatial coordinates it is called the spatial description or Eulerian description.

There is continuity during 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.

Affine deformation

A deformation is called an affine deformation if it can be described by an affine transformation. Such a transformation is composed of a linear transformation (such as rotation, shear, extension and compression) and a rigid body translation. Affine deformations are also called homogeneous deformations.[8]

Therefore, an affine deformation has the form

 
where x is the position of a point in the deformed configuration, X is the position in a reference configuration, t is a time-like parameter, F is the linear transformer and c is the translation. In matrix form, where the components are with respect to an orthonormal basis,
 

The above deformation becomes non-affine or inhomogeneous if F = F(X,t) or c = c(X,t).

Rigid body motion

A rigid body motion is a special affine deformation that does not involve any shear, extension or compression. The transformation matrix F is proper orthogonal in order to allow rotations but no reflections.

A rigid body motion can be described by

 
where
 
In matrix form,
 

Displacement

 
Figure 1. 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 κ0(B) to a current or deformed configuration κt(B) (Figure 1).

If after a displacement of the continuum there is a relative displacement between particles, a deformation has occurred. On the other hand, if after displacement of the continuum the relative displacement between particles in the current configuration is zero, then there is no deformation and a rigid-body displacement is said to have occurred.

The vector joining the positions of a particle P in the undeformed configuration and deformed configuration is called the displacement vector u(X,t) = uiei in the Lagrangian description, or U(x,t) = UJEJ 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 αJi are the direction cosines between the material and spatial coordinate systems with unit vectors EJ and ei, respectively. Thus
 
and the relationship between ui and UJ is then given by
 

Knowing that

 
then
 

It is common to superimpose the coordinate systems for the undeformed and deformed configurations, which results in b = 0, and the direction cosines become Kronecker deltas:

 

Thus, we have

 
or in terms of the spatial coordinates as
 

Displacement gradient tensor

The partial differentiation of the displacement vector with respect to the material coordinates yields the material displacement gradient tensor Xu. Thus we have:

 
or
 
where F is the deformation gradient tensor.

Similarly, the partial differentiation of the displacement vector with respect to the spatial coordinates yields the spatial displacement gradient tensor xU. Thus we have,

 
or
 

Examples of deformations

Homogeneous (or affine) deformations are useful in elucidating the behavior of materials. Some homogeneous deformations of interest are

Plane deformations are also of interest, particularly in the experimental context.

Plane deformation

A plane deformation, also called plane strain, is one where the deformation is restricted to one of the planes in the reference configuration. If the deformation is restricted to the plane described by the basis vectors e1, e2, the deformation gradient has the form

 
In matrix form,
 
From the polar decomposition theorem, the deformation gradient, up to a change of coordinates, can be decomposed into a stretch and a rotation. Since all the deformation is in a plane, we can write[8]
 
where θ is the angle of rotation and λ1, λ2 are the principal stretches.

Isochoric plane deformation

If the deformation is isochoric (volume preserving) then det(F) = 1 and we have

 
Alternatively,
 

Simple shear

A simple shear deformation is defined as an isochoric plane deformation in which there is a set of line elements with a given reference orientation that do not change length and orientation during the deformation.[8]

If e1 is the fixed reference orientation in which line elements do not deform during the deformation then λ1 = 1 and F·e1 = e1. Therefore,

 
Since the deformation is isochoric,
 
Define
 
Then, the deformation gradient in simple shear can be expressed as
 
Now,
 
Since
 
we can also write the deformation gradient as
 

See also

References

  1. ^ Truesdell, C.; Noll, W. (2004). The non-linear field theories of mechanics (3rd ed.). Springer. p. 48.
  2. ^ Wu, H.-C. (2005). Continuum Mechanics and Plasticity. CRC Press. ISBN 1-58488-363-4.
  3. ^ Lubliner, Jacob (2008). (PDF) (Revised ed.). Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-46290-0. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-03-31.
  4. ^ a b Rees, David (2006). Basic Engineering Plasticity: An Introduction with Engineering and Manufacturing Applications. Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 0-7506-8025-3. from the original on 2017-12-22.
  5. ^ "Earth."Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica 2006 Ultimate Reference Suite DVD .[2009].
  6. ^ Rees, David (2006). Basic Engineering Plasticity: An Introduction with Engineering and Manufacturing Applications. Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 41. ISBN 0-7506-8025-3. from the original on 2017-12-22.
  7. ^ Hencky, H. (1928). "Über die Form des Elastizitätsgesetzes bei ideal elastischen Stoffen". Zeitschrift für technische Physik. 9: 215–220.
  8. ^ a b c Ogden, R. W. (1984). Non-linear Elastic Deformations. Dover.

Further reading

  • Bazant, Zdenek P.; Cedolin, Luigi (2010). Three-Dimensional Continuum Instabilities and Effects of Finite Strain Tensor, chapter 11 in "Stability of Structures", 3rd ed. Singapore, New Jersey, London: World Scientific Publishing. ISBN 9814317039.
  • Dill, Ellis Harold (2006). Continuum Mechanics: Elasticity, Plasticity, Viscoelasticity. Germany: CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-9779-0.
  • Hutter, Kolumban; Jöhnk, Klaus (2004). Continuum Methods of Physical Modeling. Germany: Springer. ISBN 3-540-20619-1.
  • Jirasek, M; Bazant, Z.P. (2002). Inelastic Analysis of Structures. London and New York: J. Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0471987166.
  • Lubarda, Vlado A. (2001). Elastoplasticity Theory. CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-1138-1.
  • Macosko, C. W. (1994). Rheology: principles, measurement and applications. VCH Publishers. ISBN 1-56081-579-5.
  • Mase, George E. (1970). Continuum Mechanics. McGraw-Hill Professional. ISBN 0-07-040663-4.
  • Mase, G. Thomas; Mase, George E. (1999). Continuum Mechanics for Engineers (2nd ed.). CRC Press. ISBN 0-8493-1855-6.
  • Nemat-Nasser, Sia (2006). Plasticity: A Treatise on Finite Deformation of Heterogeneous Inelastic Materials. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-83979-3.
  • Prager, William (1961). Introduction to Mechanics of Continua. Boston: Ginn and Co. ISBN 0486438090.

deformation, physics, usage, engineering, deformation, engineering, physics, deformation, continuum, mechanics, transformation, body, from, reference, configuration, current, configuration, configuration, containing, positions, particles, body, deformation, th. For usage in engineering see Deformation engineering In physics deformation is the continuum mechanics transformation of a body from a reference configuration to a current configuration 1 A configuration is a set containing the positions of all particles of the body The deformation of a thin straight rod into a closed loop The length of the rod remains almost unchanged during the deformation which indicates that the strain is small In this particular case of bending displacements associated with rigid translations and rotations of material elements in the rod are much greater than displacements associated with straining A deformation can occur because of external loads 2 intrinsic activity e g muscle contraction body forces such as gravity or electromagnetic forces or changes in temperature moisture content or chemical reactions etc Strain is related to deformation in terms of relative displacement of particles in the body that excludes rigid body motions Different equivalent choices may be made for the expression of a strain field depending on whether it is defined with respect to the initial or the final configuration of the body and on whether the metric tensor or its dual is considered In a continuous body a deformation field results from a stress field due to applied forces or because of some changes in the temperature field of the body The relation between stress and strain is expressed by constitutive equations e g Hooke s law for linear elastic materials Deformations which cease to exist after the stress field is removed are termed as elastic deformation In this case the continuum completely recovers its original configuration On the other hand irreversible deformations remain They exist even after stresses have been removed One type of irreversible deformation is plastic deformation which occurs in material bodies after stresses have attained a certain threshold value known as the elastic limit or yield stress and are the result of slip or dislocation mechanisms at the atomic level Another type of irreversible deformation is viscous deformation which is the irreversible part of viscoelastic deformation In the case of elastic deformations the response function linking strain to the deforming stress is the compliance tensor of the material Contents 1 Strain 1 1 Strain measures 1 1 1 Engineering strain 1 1 2 Stretch ratio 1 1 3 True strain 1 1 4 Green strain 1 1 5 Almansi strain 1 2 Normal and shear strain 1 2 1 Normal strain 1 2 2 Shear strain 1 3 Metric tensor 2 Description of deformation 2 1 Affine deformation 2 2 Rigid body motion 3 Displacement 3 1 Displacement gradient tensor 4 Examples of deformations 4 1 Plane deformation 4 1 1 Isochoric plane deformation 4 1 2 Simple shear 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingStrain EditSee also Stress measures and Strain rate Strain represents the displacement between particles in the body relative to a reference length Deformation of a body is expressed in the form x F X where X is the reference position of material points of the body Such a measure does not distinguish between rigid body motions translations and rotations and changes in shape and size of the body A deformation has units of length We could for example define strain to bee X x X F I displaystyle boldsymbol varepsilon doteq cfrac partial partial mathbf X left mathbf x mathbf X right boldsymbol F boldsymbol I where I is the identity tensor Hence strains are dimensionless and are usually expressed as a decimal fraction a percentage or in parts per notation Strains measure how much a given deformation differs locally from a rigid body deformation 3 A strain is in general a tensor quantity Physical insight into strains can be gained by observing that a given strain can be decomposed into normal and shear components The amount of stretch or compression along material line elements or fibers is the normal strain and the amount of distortion associated with the sliding of plane layers over each other is the shear strain within a deforming body 4 This could be applied by elongation shortening or volume changes or angular distortion 5 The state of strain at a material point of a continuum body is defined as the totality of all the changes in length of material lines or fibers the normal strain which pass through that point and also the totality of all the changes in the angle between pairs of lines initially perpendicular to each other the shear strain radiating from this point However it is sufficient to know the normal and shear components of strain on a set of three mutually perpendicular directions If there is an increase in length of the material line the normal strain is called tensile strain otherwise if there is reduction or compression in the length of the material line it is called compressive strain Strain measures Edit Depending on the amount of strain or local deformation the analysis of deformation is subdivided into three deformation theories Finite strain theory also called large strain theory large deformation theory deals with deformations in which both rotations and strains are arbitrarily large In this case the undeformed and deformed configurations of the continuum are significantly different and a clear distinction has to be made between them This is commonly the case with elastomers plastically deforming materials and other fluids and biological soft tissue Infinitesimal strain theory also called small strain theory small deformation theory small displacement theory or small displacement gradient theory where strains and rotations are both small In this case the undeformed and deformed configurations of the body can be assumed identical The infinitesimal strain theory is used in the analysis of deformations of materials exhibiting elastic behavior such as materials found in mechanical and civil engineering applications e g concrete and steel Large displacement or large rotation theory which assumes small strains but large rotations and displacements In each of these theories the strain is then defined differently The engineering strain is the most common definition applied to materials used in mechanical and structural engineering which are subjected to very small deformations On the other hand for some materials e g elastomers and polymers subjected to large deformations the engineering definition of strain is not applicable e g typical engineering strains greater than 1 6 thus other more complex definitions of strain are required such as stretch logarithmic strain Green strain and Almansi strain Engineering strain Edit Engineering strain also known as Cauchy strain is expressed as the ratio of total deformation to the initial dimension of the material body on which forces are applied The engineering normal strain or engineering extensional strain or nominal strain e of a material line element or fiber axially loaded is expressed as the change in length DL per unit of the original length L of the line element or fibers The normal strain is positive if the material fibers are stretched and negative if they are compressed Thus we havee D L L l L L displaystyle e frac Delta L L frac l L L where e is the engineering normal strain L is the original length of the fiber and l is the final length of the fiber Measures of strain are often expressed in parts per million or microstrains The true shear strain is defined as the change in the angle in radians between two material line elements initially perpendicular to each other in the undeformed or initial configuration The engineering shear strain is defined as the tangent of that angle and is equal to the length of deformation at its maximum divided by the perpendicular length in the plane of force application which sometimes makes it easier to calculate Stretch ratio Edit The stretch ratio or extension ratio is a measure of the extensional or normal strain of a differential line element which can be defined at either the undeformed configuration or the deformed configuration It is defined as the ratio between the final length l and the initial length L of the material line l l L displaystyle lambda frac l L The extension ratio is approximately related to the engineering strain bye l L L l 1 displaystyle e frac l L L lambda 1 This equation implies that the normal strain is zero so that there is no deformation when the stretch is equal to unity The stretch ratio is used in the analysis of materials that exhibit large deformations such as elastomers which can sustain stretch ratios of 3 or 4 before they fail On the other hand traditional engineering materials such as concrete or steel fail at much lower stretch ratios True strain Edit The logarithmic strain e also called true strain or Hencky strain 7 Considering an incremental strain Ludwik d e d l l displaystyle delta varepsilon frac delta l l the logarithmic strain is obtained by integrating this incremental strain d e L l d l l e ln l L ln l ln 1 e e e 2 2 e 3 3 displaystyle begin aligned int delta varepsilon amp int L l frac delta l l varepsilon amp ln left frac l L right ln lambda amp ln 1 e amp e frac e 2 2 frac e 3 3 cdots end aligned where e is the engineering strain The logarithmic strain provides the correct measure of the final strain when deformation takes place in a series of increments taking into account the influence of the strain path 4 Green strain Edit Main article Finite strain theory The Green strain is defined as e G 1 2 l 2 L 2 L 2 1 2 l 2 1 displaystyle varepsilon G tfrac 1 2 left frac l 2 L 2 L 2 right tfrac 1 2 lambda 2 1 Almansi strain Edit Main article Finite strain theory The Euler Almansi strain is defined ase E 1 2 l 2 L 2 l 2 1 2 1 1 l 2 displaystyle varepsilon E tfrac 1 2 left frac l 2 L 2 l 2 right tfrac 1 2 left 1 frac 1 lambda 2 right Normal and shear strain Edit Two dimensional geometric deformation of an infinitesimal material element Strains are classified as either normal or shear A normal strain is perpendicular to the face of an element and a shear strain is parallel to it These definitions are consistent with those of normal stress and shear stress Normal strain Edit For an isotropic material that obeys Hooke s law a normal stress will cause a normal strain Normal strains produce dilations Consider a two dimensional infinitesimal rectangular material element with dimensions dx dy which after deformation takes the form of a rhombus The deformation is described by the displacement field u From the geometry of the adjacent figure we havel e n g t h A B d x displaystyle mathrm length AB dx and l e n g t h a b d x u x x d x 2 u y x d x 2 d x 2 1 u x x 2 d x 2 u y x 2 d x 1 u x x 2 u y x 2 displaystyle begin aligned mathrm length ab amp sqrt left dx frac partial u x partial x dx right 2 left frac partial u y partial x dx right 2 amp sqrt dx 2 left 1 frac partial u x partial x right 2 dx 2 left frac partial u y partial x right 2 amp dx sqrt left 1 frac partial u x partial x right 2 left frac partial u y partial x right 2 end aligned For very small displacement gradients the square of the derivative of u y displaystyle u y are negligible and we have l e n g t h a b d x 1 u x x d x u x x d x displaystyle mathrm length ab approx dx left 1 frac partial u x partial x right dx frac partial u x partial x dx The normal strain in the x direction of the rectangular element is defined by e x extension original length l e n g t h a b l e n g t h A B l e n g t h A B u x x displaystyle varepsilon x frac text extension text original length frac mathrm length ab mathrm length AB mathrm length AB frac partial u x partial x Similarly the normal strain in the y and z directions becomes e y u y y e z u z z displaystyle varepsilon y frac partial u y partial y quad qquad varepsilon z frac partial u z partial z Shear strain Edit Shear strainCommon symbolsg or eSI unit1 or radianDerivations fromother quantitiesg t GThe engineering shear strain gxy is defined as the change in angle between lines AC and AB Therefore g x y a b displaystyle gamma xy alpha beta From the geometry of the figure we havetan a u y x d x d x u x x d x u y x 1 u x x tan b u x y d y d y u y y d y u x y 1 u y y displaystyle begin aligned tan alpha amp frac tfrac partial u y partial x dx dx tfrac partial u x partial x dx frac tfrac partial u y partial x 1 tfrac partial u x partial x tan beta amp frac tfrac partial u x partial y dy dy tfrac partial u y partial y dy frac tfrac partial u x partial y 1 tfrac partial u y partial y end aligned For small displacement gradients we have u x x 1 u y y 1 displaystyle frac partial u x partial x ll 1 frac partial u y partial y ll 1 For small rotations i e a and b are 1 we have tan a a tan b b Therefore a u y x b u x y displaystyle alpha approx frac partial u y partial x beta approx frac partial u x partial y thus g x y a b u y x u x y displaystyle gamma xy alpha beta frac partial u y partial x frac partial u x partial y By interchanging x and y and ux and uy it can be shown that gxy gyx Similarly for the yz and xz planes we haveg y z g z y u y z u z y g z x g x z u z x u x z displaystyle gamma yz gamma zy frac partial u y partial z frac partial u z partial y quad qquad gamma zx gamma xz frac partial u z partial x frac partial u x partial z The tensorial shear strain components of the infinitesimal strain tensor can then be expressed using the engineering strain definition g ase e x x e x y e x z e y x e y y e y z e z x e z y e z z e x x 1 2 g x y 1 2 g x z 1 2 g y x e y y 1 2 g y z 1 2 g z x 1 2 g z y e z z displaystyle underline underline boldsymbol varepsilon begin bmatrix varepsilon xx amp varepsilon xy amp varepsilon xz varepsilon yx amp varepsilon yy amp varepsilon yz varepsilon zx amp varepsilon zy amp varepsilon zz end bmatrix begin bmatrix varepsilon xx amp tfrac 1 2 gamma xy amp tfrac 1 2 gamma xz tfrac 1 2 gamma yx amp varepsilon yy amp tfrac 1 2 gamma yz tfrac 1 2 gamma zx amp tfrac 1 2 gamma zy amp varepsilon zz end bmatrix Metric tensor Edit Main article Finite strain theory Deformation tensors in curvilinear coordinates A strain field associated with a displacement is defined at any point by the change in length of the tangent vectors representing the speeds of arbitrarily parametrized curves passing through that point A basic geometric result due to Frechet von Neumann and Jordan states that if the lengths of the tangent vectors fulfil the axioms of a norm and the parallelogram law then the length of a vector is the square root of the value of the quadratic form associated by the polarization formula with a positive definite bilinear map called the metric tensor Description of deformation EditDeformation is the change in the metric properties of a continuous body meaning that a curve drawn in the initial body placement changes its length when displaced to a curve in the final placement If none of the curves changes length it is said that a rigid body displacement occurred It is convenient to identify a reference configuration or initial geometric state of the continuum body which all subsequent configurations are referenced from The reference configuration need not be one the body actually will ever occupy Often the configuration at t 0 is considered the reference configuration k0 B The configuration at the current time t is the current configuration For deformation analysis the reference configuration is identified as undeformed configuration and the current configuration as deformed configuration Additionally time is not considered when analyzing deformation thus the sequence of configurations between the undeformed and deformed configurations are of no interest The components Xi of the position vector X of a particle in the reference configuration taken with respect to the reference coordinate system are called the material or reference coordinates On the other hand the components xi of the position vector x of a particle in the deformed configuration taken with respect to the spatial coordinate system of reference are called the spatial coordinatesThere are two methods for analysing the deformation of a continuum One description is made in terms of the material or referential coordinates called material description or Lagrangian description A second description of deformation is made in terms of the spatial coordinates it is called the spatial description or Eulerian description There is continuity during 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 Affine deformation Edit A deformation is called an affine deformation if it can be described by an affine transformation Such a transformation is composed of a linear transformation such as rotation shear extension and compression and a rigid body translation Affine deformations are also called homogeneous deformations 8 Therefore an affine deformation has the formx X t F t X c t displaystyle mathbf x mathbf X t boldsymbol F t cdot mathbf X mathbf c t where x is the position of a point in the deformed configuration X is the position in a reference configuration t is a time like parameter F is the linear transformer and c is the translation In matrix form where the components are with respect to an orthonormal basis x 1 X 1 X 2 X 3 t x 2 X 1 X 2 X 3 t x 3 X 1 X 2 X 3 t F 11 t F 12 t F 13 t F 21 t F 22 t F 23 t F 31 t F 32 t F 33 t X 1 X 2 X 3 c 1 t c 2 t c 3 t displaystyle begin bmatrix x 1 X 1 X 2 X 3 t x 2 X 1 X 2 X 3 t x 3 X 1 X 2 X 3 t end bmatrix begin bmatrix F 11 t amp F 12 t amp F 13 t F 21 t amp F 22 t amp F 23 t F 31 t amp F 32 t amp F 33 t end bmatrix begin bmatrix X 1 X 2 X 3 end bmatrix begin bmatrix c 1 t c 2 t c 3 t end bmatrix The above deformation becomes non affine or inhomogeneous if F F X t or c c X t Rigid body motion Edit A rigid body motion is a special affine deformation that does not involve any shear extension or compression The transformation matrix F is proper orthogonal in order to allow rotations but no reflections A rigid body motion can be described byx X t Q t X c t displaystyle mathbf x mathbf X t boldsymbol Q t cdot mathbf X mathbf c t where Q Q T Q T Q 1 displaystyle boldsymbol Q cdot boldsymbol Q T boldsymbol Q T cdot boldsymbol Q boldsymbol mathit 1 In matrix form x 1 X 1 X 2 X 3 t x 2 X 1 X 2 X 3 t x 3 X 1 X 2 X 3 t Q 11 t Q 12 t Q 13 t Q 21 t Q 22 t Q 23 t Q 31 t Q 32 t Q 33 t X 1 X 2 X 3 c 1 t c 2 t c 3 t displaystyle begin bmatrix x 1 X 1 X 2 X 3 t x 2 X 1 X 2 X 3 t x 3 X 1 X 2 X 3 t end bmatrix begin bmatrix Q 11 t amp Q 12 t amp Q 13 t Q 21 t amp Q 22 t amp Q 23 t Q 31 t amp Q 32 t amp Q 33 t end bmatrix begin bmatrix X 1 X 2 X 3 end bmatrix begin bmatrix c 1 t c 2 t c 3 t end bmatrix Displacement Edit Figure 1 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 to a current or deformed configuration kt B Figure 1 If after a displacement of the continuum there is a relative displacement between particles a deformation has occurred On the other hand if after displacement of the continuum the relative displacement between particles in the current configuration is zero then there is no deformation and a rigid body displacement is said to have occurred The vector joining the positions of a particle P in the undeformed configuration and deformed configuration is called the displacement vector u X t uiei in the Lagrangian description or U x t UJEJ 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 asu X t b X t x X t X or u i a i J b J x i a i J X J displaystyle mathbf u mathbf X t mathbf b mathbf X t 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 t x X x t or U J b J a J i x i X J displaystyle mathbf U mathbf x t mathbf b mathbf x t mathbf x mathbf X mathbf x t qquad text or qquad U J b J alpha Ji x i X J where aJi are the direction cosines between the material and spatial coordinate systems with unit vectors EJ and ei respectively Thus E J e i a J i a i J displaystyle mathbf E J cdot mathbf e i alpha Ji alpha iJ and the relationship between ui and UJ is then given by u i a i J U J or U J a J i u i displaystyle u i alpha iJ U J qquad text or qquad U J alpha Ji u i Knowing thate i a i J E J displaystyle mathbf e i alpha iJ mathbf E J then u X t u i e i u i a i J E J U J E J 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 and the direction cosines become Kronecker deltas E J e i d J i d i J displaystyle mathbf E J cdot mathbf e i delta Ji delta iJ Thus we haveu X t x X t X or u i x i d i J X J x i X i 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 x i X i or in terms of the spatial coordinates as U x t x X x t or U J d J i x i X J x J X J 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 x J X J Displacement gradient tensor Edit The partial differentiation of the displacement vector with respect to the material coordinates yields the material displacement gradient tensor Xu Thus we have u X t x X t X X u X x I X u F I displaystyle begin aligned mathbf u mathbf X t amp mathbf x mathbf X t mathbf X nabla mathbf X mathbf u amp nabla mathbf X mathbf x mathbf I nabla mathbf X mathbf u amp mathbf F mathbf I end aligned or u i x i d i J X J x i X i u i X K x i X K d i K displaystyle begin aligned u i amp x i delta iJ X J x i X i frac partial u i partial X K amp frac partial x i partial X K delta iK end aligned where F is the deformation gradient tensor Similarly the partial differentiation of the displacement vector with respect to the spatial coordinates yields the spatial displacement gradient tensor xU Thus we have U x t x X x t x U I x X x U I F 1 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf U mathbf x t amp mathbf x mathbf X mathbf x t nabla mathbf x mathbf U amp mathbf I nabla mathbf x mathbf X nabla mathbf x mathbf U amp mathbf I mathbf F 1 end aligned or U J d J i x i X J x J X J U J x k d J k X J x k displaystyle begin aligned U J amp delta Ji x i X J x J X J frac partial U J partial x k amp delta Jk frac partial X J partial x k end aligned Examples of deformations EditHomogeneous or affine deformations are useful in elucidating the behavior of materials Some homogeneous deformations of interest are uniform extension pure dilation equibiaxial tension simple shear pure shearPlane deformations are also of interest particularly in the experimental context Plane deformation Edit A plane deformation also called plane strain is one where the deformation is restricted to one of the planes in the reference configuration If the deformation is restricted to the plane described by the basis vectors e1 e2 the deformation gradient has the formF F 11 e 1 e 1 F 12 e 1 e 2 F 21 e 2 e 1 F 22 e 2 e 2 e 3 e 3 displaystyle boldsymbol F F 11 mathbf e 1 otimes mathbf e 1 F 12 mathbf e 1 otimes mathbf e 2 F 21 mathbf e 2 otimes mathbf e 1 F 22 mathbf e 2 otimes mathbf e 2 mathbf e 3 otimes mathbf e 3 In matrix form F F 11 F 12 0 F 21 F 22 0 0 0 1 displaystyle boldsymbol F begin bmatrix F 11 amp F 12 amp 0 F 21 amp F 22 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 end bmatrix From the polar decomposition theorem the deformation gradient up to a change of coordinates can be decomposed into a stretch and a rotation Since all the deformation is in a plane we can write 8 F R U cos 8 sin 8 0 sin 8 cos 8 0 0 0 1 l 1 0 0 0 l 2 0 0 0 1 displaystyle boldsymbol F boldsymbol R cdot boldsymbol U begin bmatrix cos theta amp sin theta amp 0 sin theta amp cos theta amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 end bmatrix begin bmatrix lambda 1 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp lambda 2 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 end bmatrix where 8 is the angle of rotation and l1 l2 are the principal stretches Isochoric plane deformation Edit If the deformation is isochoric volume preserving then det F 1 and we haveF 11 F 22 F 12 F 21 1 displaystyle F 11 F 22 F 12 F 21 1 Alternatively l 1 l 2 1 displaystyle lambda 1 lambda 2 1 Simple shear Edit A simple shear deformation is defined as an isochoric plane deformation in which there is a set of line elements with a given reference orientation that do not change length and orientation during the deformation 8 If e1 is the fixed reference orientation in which line elements do not deform during the deformation then l1 1 and F e1 e1 Therefore F 11 e 1 F 21 e 2 e 1 F 11 1 F 21 0 displaystyle F 11 mathbf e 1 F 21 mathbf e 2 mathbf e 1 quad implies quad F 11 1 F 21 0 Since the deformation is isochoric F 11 F 22 F 12 F 21 1 F 22 1 displaystyle F 11 F 22 F 12 F 21 1 quad implies quad F 22 1 Define g F 12 displaystyle gamma F 12 Then the deformation gradient in simple shear can be expressed as F 1 g 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 displaystyle boldsymbol F begin bmatrix 1 amp gamma amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp 1 end bmatrix Now F e 2 F 12 e 1 F 22 e 2 g e 1 e 2 F e 2 e 2 g e 1 e 2 e 2 e 2 displaystyle boldsymbol F cdot mathbf e 2 F 12 mathbf e 1 F 22 mathbf e 2 gamma mathbf e 1 mathbf e 2 quad implies quad boldsymbol F cdot mathbf e 2 otimes mathbf e 2 gamma mathbf e 1 otimes mathbf e 2 mathbf e 2 otimes mathbf e 2 Since e i e i 1 displaystyle mathbf e i otimes mathbf e i boldsymbol mathit 1 we can also write the deformation gradient as F 1 g e 1 e 2 displaystyle boldsymbol F boldsymbol mathit 1 gamma mathbf e 1 otimes mathbf e 2 See also EditThe deformation of long elements such as beams or studs due to bending forces is known as deflection Euler Bernoulli beam theory Deformation engineering Finite strain theory Infinitesimal strain theory Moire pattern Shear modulus Shear stress Shear strength Stress mechanics Stress measuresReferences Edit Truesdell C Noll W 2004 The non linear field theories of mechanics 3rd ed Springer p 48 Wu H C 2005 Continuum Mechanics and Plasticity CRC Press ISBN 1 58488 363 4 Lubliner Jacob 2008 Plasticity Theory PDF Revised ed Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 46290 0 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 03 31 a b Rees David 2006 Basic Engineering Plasticity An Introduction with Engineering and Manufacturing Applications Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 0 7506 8025 3 Archived from the original on 2017 12 22 Earth Encyclopaedia Britannica from Encyclopaedia Britannica 2006 Ultimate Reference Suite DVD 2009 Rees David 2006 Basic Engineering Plasticity An Introduction with Engineering and Manufacturing Applications Butterworth Heinemann p 41 ISBN 0 7506 8025 3 Archived from the original on 2017 12 22 Hencky H 1928 Uber die Form des Elastizitatsgesetzes bei ideal elastischen Stoffen Zeitschrift fur technische Physik 9 215 220 a b c Ogden R W 1984 Non linear Elastic Deformations Dover Further reading EditBazant Zdenek P Cedolin Luigi 2010 Three Dimensional Continuum Instabilities and Effects of Finite Strain Tensor chapter 11 in Stability of Structures 3rd ed Singapore New Jersey London World Scientific Publishing ISBN 9814317039 Dill Ellis Harold 2006 Continuum Mechanics Elasticity Plasticity Viscoelasticity Germany CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 9779 0 Hutter Kolumban Johnk Klaus 2004 Continuum Methods of Physical Modeling Germany Springer ISBN 3 540 20619 1 Jirasek M Bazant Z P 2002 Inelastic Analysis of Structures London and New York J Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0471987166 Lubarda Vlado A 2001 Elastoplasticity Theory CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 1138 1 Macosko C W 1994 Rheology principles measurement and applications VCH Publishers ISBN 1 56081 579 5 Mase George E 1970 Continuum Mechanics McGraw Hill Professional ISBN 0 07 040663 4 Mase G Thomas Mase George E 1999 Continuum Mechanics for Engineers 2nd ed CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 1855 6 Nemat Nasser Sia 2006 Plasticity A Treatise on Finite Deformation of Heterogeneous Inelastic Materials Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 83979 3 Prager William 1961 Introduction to Mechanics of Continua Boston Ginn and Co ISBN 0486438090 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deformation physics amp oldid 1123309771, 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