Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering, also Institute for Condensed Matter Theory, and Beckman Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, USA
Abstract
The micromechanics based on the Hill-Mandel condition indicates that the
majority of stochastic finite element methods hinge on random field (RF)
models of material properties (such as Hooke?s law) having no physical
content, or even at odds with physics. At the same time, that condition
allows one to set up the RFs of stiffness and compliance tensors in function
of the mesoscale and actual random microstructure of the given material. The
mesoscale is defined through a Statistical Volume Element (SVE), i.e. a
material domain below the Representative Volume Element (RVE) level. The
paper outlines a procedure for stochastic scale-dependent homogenization
leading to a determination of mesoscale one-point and two-point statistics
and, thus, a construction of analytical RF models.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Mechanical Engineering,Computational Mechanics
Cited by
13 articles.
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