Adam Sky

2papers

2 Papers

58.8NAMay 25
A structure-preserving discretisation of SO(3)-rotation fields for finite Cosserat micropolar elasticity

Lucca Schek, Peter Lewintan, Wolfgang Müller et al.

We introduce a new method, dubbed Geometric Structure-Preserving Interpolation ($Γ$-SPIN) to preserve physics-constraints inherent in the material parameter limits of the finite-strain Cosserat micropolar model. The method advocates to interpolate the Cosserat rotation tensor using geodesic elements, which maintain objectivity and correctly represent curvature measures. At the same time, it proposes relaxing the interaction between the rotation tensor and the deformation tensor to alleviate locking effects. This relaxation is achieved in two steps. First, the regularity of the Cosserat rotation tensor is reduced by interpolating it into the Nédélec space. Second, the resulting field is projected back onto the Lie-group of rotations. Together, these steps define a lower-regularity projection-based interpolation. The construction allows the discrete Cosserat rotation tensor to match the polar part of the discrete deformation tensor. This ensures stable behaviour in the asymptotic regime as the Cosserat couple modulus tends to infinity, which constrains the model towards its couple-stress limit. We establish the consistency, stability, and optimality of the proposed method through several benchmark problems. The study culminates in a demonstration of its efficacy on a more intricate curved domain, contrasted with outcomes obtained from conventional interpolation techniques.

71.6MTRL-SCIMar 13
Cosserat micropolar and couple-stress elasticity models of flexomagnetism at finite deformations

Adam Sky, David Codony, Stephan Rudykh et al.

We propose geometrically nonlinear (finite) continuum models of flexomagnetism based on the Cosserat micropolar and its descendent couple-stress theory. These models introduce the magneto-mechanical interaction by coupling the micro-dislocation tensor of the micropolar model with the magnetisation vector using a Lifshitz invariant. In contrast to conventional formulations that couple strain-gradients to the magnetisation using fourth-order tensors, our approach relies on third-order tensor couplings by virtue of the micro-dislocation being a second-order tensor. Consequently, the models permit centrosymmetric materials with a single new flexomagnetic constant, and more generally allow cubic-symmetric materials with two such constants. We postulate the flexomagnetic action-functionals and derive the corresponding governing equations using both scalar and vectorial magnetic potential formulations, and present numerical results for a nano-beam geometry, confirming the physical plausibility and computational feasibility of the models.