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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
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    Analysis and simulations for a phase-field fracture model at finite strains based on modified invariants
    (Berlin : Wiley-VCH, 2020) Thomas, Marita; Bilgen, Carola; Weinberg, Kerstin
    Phase-field models have already been proven to predict complex fracture patterns for brittle fracture at small strains. In this paper we discuss a model for phase-field fracture at finite deformations in more detail. Among the identification of crack location and projection of crack growth the numerical stability is one of the main challenges in solid mechanics. Here we present a phase-field model at finite strains, which takes into account the anisotropy of damage by applying an anisotropic split of the modified invariants of the right Cauchy-Green strain tensor. We introduce a suitable weak notion of solution that also allows for a spatial and temporal discretization of the model. In this framework we study the existence of solutions and we show that the time-discrete solutions converge in a weak sense to a solution of the time-continuous formulation of the model. Numerical examples in two and three space dimensions illustrate the range of validity of the analytical results.
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    Maximally dissipative solutions for incompressible fluid dynamics
    (Cham (ZG) : Springer International Publishing AG, 2021) Lasarzik, Robert
    We introduce the new concept of maximally dissipative solutions for a general class of isothermal GENERIC systems. Under certain assumptions, we show that maximally dissipative solutions are well-posed as long as the bigger class of dissipative solutions is non-empty. Applying this result to the Navier–Stokes and Euler equations, we infer global well-posedness of maximally dissipative solutions for these systems. The concept of maximally dissipative solutions coincides with the concept of weak solutions as long as the weak solutions inherits enough regularity to be unique.
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    Analysis of improved Nernst–Planck–Poisson models of compressible isothermal electrolytes
    (Cham (ZG) : Springer International Publishing AG, 2020) Dreyer, Wolfgang; Druet, Pierre-Étienne; Gajewski, Paul; Guhlke, Clemens
    We consider an improved Nernst–Planck–Poisson model first proposed by Dreyer et al. in 2013 for compressible isothermal electrolytes in non-equilibrium. The elastic deformation of the medium, that induces an inherent coupling of mass and momentum transport, is taken into account. The model consists of convection–diffusion–reaction equations for the constituents of the mixture, of the Navier–Stokes equation for the barycentric velocity and of the Poisson equation for the electrical potential. Due to the principle of mass conservation, cross-diffusion phenomena must occur, and the mobility matrix (Onsager matrix) has a non-trivial kernel. In this paper, we establish the existence of a global-in-time weak solution, allowing for a general structure of the mobility tensor and for chemical reactions with fast nonlinear rates in the bulk and on the active boundary. We characterise the singular states of the system, showing that the chemical species can vanish only globally in space, and that this phenomenon must be concentrated in a compact set of measure zero in time.
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    Symmetries in transmission electron microscopy imaging of crystals with strain
    (London : [Verlag nicht ermittelbar], 2022) Koprucki, Thomas; Maltsi, Anieza; Mielke, Alexander
    Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images of strained crystals often exhibit symmetries, the source of which is not always clear. To understand these symmetries, we distinguish between symmetries that occur from the imaging process itself and symmetries of the inclusion that might affect the image. For the imaging process, we prove mathematically that the intensities are invariant under specific transformations. A combination of these invariances with specific properties of the strain profile can then explain symmetries observed in TEM images. We demonstrate our approach to the study of symmetries in TEM images using selected examples in the field of semiconductor nanostructures such as quantum wells and quantum dots.
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    EDP-convergence for nonlinear fast–slow reaction systems with detailed balance*
    (Bristol : IOP Publ., 2021) Mielke, Alexander; Peletier, Mark A.; Stephan, Artur
    We consider nonlinear reaction systems satisfying mass-action kinetics with slow and fast reactions. It is known that the fast-reaction-rate limit can be described by an ODE with Lagrange multipliers and a set of nonlinear constraints that ask the fast reactions to be in equilibrium. Our aim is to study the limiting gradient structure which is available if the reaction system satisfies the detailed-balance condition. The gradient structure on the set of concentration vectors is given in terms of the relative Boltzmann entropy and a cosh-type dissipation potential. We show that a limiting or effective gradient structure can be rigorously derived via EDP-convergence, i.e. convergence in the sense of the energy-dissipation principle for gradient flows. In general, the effective entropy will no longer be of Boltzmann type and the reactions will no longer satisfy mass-action kinetics.
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    Stochastic homogenization on perforated domains II – Application to nonlinear elasticity models
    (Berlin : Wiley-VCH, 2022) Heida, Martin
    Based on a recent work that exposed the lack of uniformly bounded (Formula presented.) extension operators on randomly perforated domains, we study stochastic homogenization of nonlinear p-elasticity, (Formula presented.), on such structures using instead the extension operators constructed in former works. We thereby introduce two-scale convergence methods on such random domains under the intrinsic loss of regularity and prove some generally useful calculus theorems on the probability space, for example, abstract Gauss theorems.