Abstract

Abstract We present a comprehensive study on the postbuckling response of nonlocal structures performed by means of a frame-invariant fractional-order continuum theory to model the long-range (nonlocal) interactions. The use of fractional calculus facilitates an energy-based approach to nonlocal elasticity that plays a fundamental role in the present study. The underlying fractional framework enables mathematically, physically, and thermodynamically consistent integral-type constitutive models that, in contrast to the existing integer-order differential approaches, allow the nonlinear buckling and postbifurcation analyses of nonlocal structures. Furthermore, we present the first application of the Koiter’s asymptotic method to investigate postbifurcation branches of nonlocal structures. Finally, the theoretical framework is applied to study the postbuckling behavior of slender nonlocal plates. Both qualitative and quantitative analyses of the influence that long-range interactions bear on postbuckling response are undertaken. Numerical studies are carried out using a 2D fractional-order finite element method (f-FEM) modified to include a combination of the Newton–Raphson and a path-following arc-length iterative methods to solve the system of nonlinear algebraic equations that govern the equilibrium beyond the critical points. The present framework provides a general foundation to investigate the postbuckling response of potentially any type of nonlocal structure.

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