Abstract

The well-posedness of the boundary value problems for second gradient elasticity has been studied under the assumption of strong ellipticity of the dependence on the second placement gradients (see, e.g., Chambon and Moullet in Comput. Methods Appl. Mech. Eng. 193:2771–2796, 2004 and Mareno and Healey in SIAM J. Math. Anal. 38:103–115, 2006).The study of the equilibrium of planar pantographic lattices has been approached in two different ways: in dell’Isola et al. (Proc. R. Soc. Lond. Ser. A 472:20150, 2016) a discrete model was introduced involving extensional and rotational springs which is also valid in large deformations regimes while in Boutin et al. (Math. Mech. Complex Syst. 5:127–162, 2017) the lattice has been modelled as a set of beam elements interconnected by internal pivots, but the analysis was restricted to the linear case. In both papers a homogenized second gradient deformation energy, quadratic in the neighbourhood of non deformed configuration, is obtained via perturbative methods and the predictions obtained with the obtained continuum model are successfully compared with experiments. This energy is not strongly elliptic in its dependence on second gradients. We consider in this paper also the important particular case of pantographic lattices whose first gradient energy does not depend on shear deformation: this could be considered either a pathological case or an important exceptional case (see Stillwell et al. in Am. Math. Mon. 105:850–858, 1998 and Turro in Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl. 39:2255–2259, 2000). In both cases we believe that such a particular case deserves some attention because of what we can understand by studying it (see Dyson in Science 200:677–678, 1978). This circumstance motivates the present paper, where we address the well-posedness of the planar linearized equilibrium problem for homogenized pantographic lattices. To do so: (i) we introduce a class of subsets of anisotropic Sobolev’s space as the most suitable energy space E relative to assigned boundary conditions; (ii) we prove that the considered strain energy density is coercive and positive definite in E; (iii) we prove that the set of placements for which the strain energy is vanishing (the so-called floppy modes) must strictly include rigid motions; (iv) we determine the restrictions on displacement boundary conditions which assure existence and uniqueness of linear static problems. The presented results represent one of the first mechanical applications of the concept of Anisotropic Sobolev space, initially introduced only on the basis of purely abstract mathematical considerations.

Highlights

  • Mechanical scientists have been recently attracted to the formulation of design and construction criteria of new materials whose behaviour is established a priori

  • To do so: (i) we introduce a class of subsets of anisotropic Sobolev’s space as the most suitable energy space E relative to assigned boundary conditions; (ii) we prove that the considered strain energy density is coercive and positive definite in E; (iii) we prove that the set of placements for which the strain energy is vanishing must strictly include rigid motions; (iv) we determine the restrictions on displacement boundary conditions which assure existence and uniqueness of linear static problems

  • The results presented in this paper allow us to prove existence and uniqueness theorems for the elastic problem in the case of planar pantographic sheets and for a variety of boundary conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Mechanical scientists have been recently attracted to the formulation of design and construction criteria of new materials whose behaviour is established a priori. We need to explicitly remark here that we believe it is important to consider the particular case of pantographic lattices whose first gradient energy does not depend on shear deformation. This could be considered either a pathological case or an important exceptional object (in the sense made explicit in [58] and [67]). In both cases we believe that the pathology shown by pantographic lattices in absence of first gradient shear energy deserves due attention for what we can eventually understand by studying its ill-posedness or well-posedness. The concept of pathologic behaviour seems of of relevance only in the history of scientific thought and in the description of the process of solution finding

Postulated Deformation Energy for “Long-Fibers” Pantographic Sheets
Energy for Pantographic Sheets and Equilibrium Conditions
Heuristics
On Ellipticity of Equilibrium Equations
Existence and Uniqueness of Weak Solutions
Dirichlet’s Boundary Conditions
Mixed Boundary Conditions
Existence and Uniqueness Considering Non-zero Shear Stiffness
Conclusions
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