HOMOGENIZATION OF HIGH-FREQUENCY WAVE PROPAGATION IN LINEARLY ELASTIC
LAYERED MEDIA USING A CONTINUUM IRVING-KIRKWOOD THEORY
B. Mercer, K.K. Mandadapu and P. Papadopoulos
Int. J. Sol. Struct., 96, pp. 162-172, (2016)
Abstract
This article presents an application of a recently developed continuum
homogenization theory, inspired by the classical work of Irving and Kirkwood, to
the homogenization of plane waves in layered linearly elastic media. The theory
explicitly accounts for the effects of microscale dynamics on the macroscopic
definition of stress. It is shown that for problems involving high-frequency
wave propagation, the macroscopic stress predicted by the theory differs
significantly from classical homogenized stress definitions. The homogenization
of plane waves is studied to illustrate key aspects and implications of the
theory, including the characteristics of the homogenized macroscopic stress and
the influence of frequency on the determination of an intermediate asymptotic
length scale. In addition, a method is proposed for predicting the homogenized
stress field in a one-dimensional bar subjected to a frequency-dependent forced
vibration using only knowledge of the boundary conditions and
the material's dispersion solution. Furthermore, it is shown that due to the
linearity of the material, the proposed method accurately predicts the
homogenized stress for any time-varying displacement or stress boundary
condition that can be expressed as a sum of time-periodic signals.
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