Topics In The Mathematical Modelling Of Composite Materials (progress In Nonlinear Differential Equations And Their Applications)
by Andrej V. Cherkaev /
1997 / English / DjVu
8.8 MB Download
Andrej V. Cherkaev and Robert V. Kohn In the past twenty years we
have witnessed a renaissance of theoretical work on the macroscopic
behavior of microscopically heterogeneous mate rials. This
activity brings together a number of related themes, including: (
1) the use of weak convergence as a rigorous yet general language
for the discussion of macroscopic behavior; (2) interest in new
types of questions, particularly the "G-closure problem," motivated
in large part by applications of optimal control theory to
structural optimization; (3) the introduction of new methods for
bounding effective moduli, including one based on "com pensated
compactness"; and (4) the identification of deep links between the
analysis of microstructures and the multidimensional calculus of
variations. This work has implications for many physical problems
involving optimal design, composite materials, and coherent phase
transitions. As a result it has received attention and support from
numerous scientific communities, including engineering, materials
science, and physics as well as mathematics. There is by now an
extensive literature in this area. But for various reasons certain
fundamental papers were never properly published, circu lating
instead as mimeographed notes or preprints. Other work appeared in
poorly distributed conference proceedings volumes. Still other work
was published in standard books or journals, but written in Russian
or French. The net effect is a sort of "gap" in the literature,
which has made the subject unnecessarily difficult for newcomers to
penetrate.
Andrej V. Cherkaev and Robert V. Kohn In the past twenty years we
have witnessed a renaissance of theoretical work on the macroscopic
behavior of microscopically heterogeneous mate rials. This
activity brings together a number of related themes, including: (
1) the use of weak convergence as a rigorous yet general language
for the discussion of macroscopic behavior; (2) interest in new
types of questions, particularly the "G-closure problem," motivated
in large part by applications of optimal control theory to
structural optimization; (3) the introduction of new methods for
bounding effective moduli, including one based on "com pensated
compactness"; and (4) the identification of deep links between the
analysis of microstructures and the multidimensional calculus of
variations. This work has implications for many physical problems
involving optimal design, composite materials, and coherent phase
transitions. As a result it has received attention and support from
numerous scientific communities, including engineering, materials
science, and physics as well as mathematics. There is by now an
extensive literature in this area. But for various reasons certain
fundamental papers were never properly published, circu lating
instead as mimeographed notes or preprints. Other work appeared in
poorly distributed conference proceedings volumes. Still other work
was published in standard books or journals, but written in Russian
or French. The net effect is a sort of "gap" in the literature,
which has made the subject unnecessarily difficult for newcomers to
penetrate.