Abstract

Thick rods are employed in Nanotechnology to build modern electro mechanical systems. Design and optimization of such structures can be carried out by nonlocal continuum mechanics which is computationally convenient when compared to atomistic strategies. Bishop's kinematics is able to describe small-scale thick rods if a proper mathematical model of nonlocal elasticity is formulated to capture size effects. In all papers on the matter, nonlocal contributions are evaluated by replacing Eringen's integral convolution with the consequent (but not equivalent) differential equation governed by Helmholtz's differential operator. As notorious in integral equation theory, this replacement is possible for convolutions, defined in unbounded domains, governed by averaging kernels which are Green's functions of differential operators. Indeed, Eringen himself, in order to study nonlocal problems defined in unbounded domains, such as screw dislocations and wave propagations, suggested to replace integro-differential equations with differential conditions. A different scenario appears in Bishop rod mechanics where nonlocal integral convolutions are defined in bounded structural domains, so that Eringen's nonlocal differential equation has to be supplemented with additional boundary conditions. The objective is achieved by formulating the governing nonlocal equations by a proper variational statement. The new methodology provides an amendment of previous contributions in literature and is illustrated by investigating the elastostatic behavior of simple structural schemes. Exact solutions of Bishop rods are evaluated in terms of nonlocal parameter and cross-section gyration radius. Both hardening and softening structural responses are predictable with a suitable tuning of the parameters.

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