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Mathematical modelling of linearly elastic shells

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2003

Philippe G. Ciarlet
Affiliation:
Laboratoire d'Analyse Numérique, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 4, Place Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France E-mail: pgc@ann.jussieu.fr

Abstract

The objective of this article is to lay down the proper mathematical foundations of the two-dimensional theory of linearly elastic shells. To this end, it provides, without any recourse to any a priori assumptions of a geometrical or mechanical nature, a mathematical justification of two-dimensional linear shell theories, by means of asymptotic methods, with the thickness as the ‘small’ parameter.

A major virtue of this approach is that it naturally leads to precise mathematical definitions of linearly elastic ‘membrane’ and ‘flexural’ shells. Another noteworthy feature is that it highlights in particular the role played by two fundamental tensors, each associated with a displacement field of the middle surface, the linearized change of metric and linearized change of curvature tensors.

More specifically, under fundamentally distinct sets of assumptions bearing on the geometry of the middle surface, on the boundary conditions, and on the order of magnitude of the applied forces, it is shown that the three-dimensional displacements, once properly scaled, converge (in H1, or in L2, or in ad hoc completions) as the thickness approaches zero towards a ‘two-dimensional’ limit that satisfies either the linear two-dimensional equations of a ‘membrane’ shell (themselves divided into two subclasses) or the linear two-dimensional equations of a ‘flexural’ shell. Note that this asymptotic analysis automatically provides in each case the ‘limit’ two-dimensional equations, together with the function space over which they are well-posed.

The linear two-dimensional shell equations that are most commonly used in numerical simulations, namely Koiter's equations, Naghdi's equations, and ‘shallow’ shell equations, are then carefully described, mathematically analysed, and likewise justified by means of asymptotic analyses.

The existence and uniqueness of solutions to each one of these linear two-dimensional shell equations are also established by means of crucial inequalities of Korn's type on surfaces, which are proved in detail at the beginning of the article.

This article serves as a mathematical basis for the numerically oriented companion article by Dominique Chapelle, also in this issue of Acta Numerica.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2001

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