Abstract

This work concerns the study of the effective balance equations governing linear elastic electrostrictive composites, where mechanical strains can be observed due to the application of a given electric field in the so-called small strain and moderate electric field regime. The formulation is developed in the framework of the active elastic composites. The latter are defined as composite materials constitutively described by an additive decomposition of the stress tensor into a purely linear elastic contribution and another component, which is assumed to be given and quadratic in the applied electric field when further specialised to electrostrictive composites. We derive the new mathematical model by describing the effective mechanical behaviour of the whole material by means of the asymptotic (periodic) homogenisation technique. We assume that there exists a sharp separation between the micro-scale, where the distance among different sub-phases (i.e. inclusions and/or fibres and/or strata) is resolved, and the macro-scale, which is related to the average size of the whole system at hand. This way, we formally decompose spatial variations by assuming that every physical field and material property are depending on both the macro-scale and the micro-scale. The effective governing equations encode the role of the micro-structure, and the effective contributions to the global stress tensor are to be computed by solving appropriate linear-elastic-type cell problems on the periodic cell. We also provide analytic formulae for the electrostrictive tensor when the applied electric field is either microscopically uniform or given by a suitable multiplicative decomposition between purely microscopically and macroscopically varying components. The obtained results are consistently compared with previous works in the field, and can pave the way towards improvement of smart active materials currently utilised for engineering (possibly bio-inspired) purposes.

Highlights

  • Electroactive continua are deformable solids that respond by changing shape and size when subjected to the application of an electric field

  • The latter phenomenon plays a major role in driving deformations in electromechanical continua for sufficiently high electric fields, and when piezoelectric effects are not relevant, i.e. when the material possesses a centre of symmetry

  • We provide a novel formulation in the context of asymptotic homogenisation by following an approach consistent with [64], where the Authors deduce the effective balance equations for a material composite subjected to a continuous volume force given by the Helmholtz decomposition

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Electroactive continua (see e.g. [31,55] and references therein for a sufficiently comprehensive general theory of the continuum mechanics of electromagnetic solids) are deformable solids that respond by changing shape and size when subjected to the application of an electric field. The latter phenomenon plays a major role in driving deformations in electromechanical continua for sufficiently high electric fields, and when piezoelectric effects are not relevant, i.e. when the material possesses a centre of symmetry These materials do not change the state of polarisation when subjected to purely mechanical loading, i.e. in this sense, pure converse electrostriction does not appear in this case due to symmetry [31]. We provide a novel formulation in the context of asymptotic homogenisation by following an approach consistent with [64], where the Authors deduce the effective balance equations for a material composite subjected to a continuous volume force given by the Helmholtz decomposition.

Kinematics and dynamics of electro-sensitive composites
Multiscale modelling
Geometry and topology of the micro-structure
The macro-scale model
First cell problem
Second cell problem
Homogenised problem
Particular cases
An imposed electric field which is uniform on the micro-scale
Multiplicative decomposition of the electric field
Comparison with previous approaches to electrostriction
Concluding remarks
Jα2 bα
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call