Abstract
We study a problem set in a finely mixed periodic medium, modelling electrical conduction in biological tissues. The unknown electric potential solves standard elliptic equations set in different conductive regions (the intracellular and extracellular spaces), separated by a dielectric surface (the cell membranes), which exhibits both a capacitive and a nonlinear conductive behaviour. Accordingly, dynamical conditions prevail on the membranes, so that the dependence of the solution on the time variable t is not only of parametric character. As the spatial period of the medium goes to zero, the electric potential approaches in a suitable sense a homogenization limit u0, which keeps the prescribed boundary data, and solves the equation [Formula: see text]. This is an elliptic equation containing a term depending on the history of the gradient of u0; the matrices B0, A1 in it depend on the microstructure of the medium. More exactly, we have that, in the limit, the current is still divergence-free, but it depends on the history of the potential gradient, so that memory effects explicitly appear. The limiting equation also contains a term ℱ keeping trace of the initial data.
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More From: Mathematical Models and Methods in Applied Sciences
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