MMAE Seminar - Dr. Patrick Le Tallec - Variational Multiscale Modelling of Soft Materials Based on Elastic Networks Models
Armour College of Engineering's Mechanical, Materials & Aerospace Engineering Department will welcome Dr. Patrick Le Tallec, Professor in the Department of Mechanics at Ecole Polytechnique, France, on Wednesday, September 20th, to present his lecture, Variational Multiscale Modelling of Soft Materials Based on Elastic Networks Models.
Abstract
Large deformation models of structures made of soft materials such as polymers or biological tissues are faced with mathematical and modelling issues. On the mathematical side, existence results are based on quasi convexity and coerciveness assumptions to be a priori imposed on the macroscopic free energy. On the modelling part, the challenge is to introduce a relevant choice of macroscopic internal variables and to postulate an adequate form of dissipation within the material. This global and phenomenological approach can successfully handle different levels of complexity to take into account electrochemical excitations, clusterisation, ageing, crystallization and so on. It is nevertheless faced with a high level of arbitration in the derivation of the model, and with the difficulty of handling evolving anisotropy or local heterogeneities as observed in damage or in phase transitions.
To overcome such limitations, one tries to relate the energy densities at the continuum level with the physically motivated free energy of polymer chains. The difficulty is to pass from one chain to a network of cross-linked chains, and to relate the evolution of this network to the macroscopic deformation. The use of a microscopic network problem minimizing the local free energy while imposing the macroscopic deformation through a far field microscopic boundary condition [1] is a mathematically rigorous and attractive approach. It leads in theory to well behaved mathematical models but it is practically out of reach because of its complexity.
A simpler strategy which is yet to be mathematically justified is to reduce the microstructure to a distribution of one dimensional stress strain relations over the orientation space. Such microsphere approaches have been used successfully in the past to describe complex phenomena such as Mullins effect [2] or strain induced crystallization [3]. But in most cases, the different local orientations were related to the 3D deformation through a simplified affine network deformation assumption. The talk will explain why and how to go beyond the affine assumption through a local variational approach which minimizes the local free energy of the microstructure in the configuration space under a macroscopic deformation constraint to be expressed as a maximal path constraint [4].
[1] Gloria, A., Le Tallec, P., & Vidrascu, M. (2013). Foundation, Analysis, and Numerical Investigation of a Variational Network Based Model for Rubber. Continuum Mech. Thermodyn., 1-31.
[2] Diani, J., Brieu, M., & Vacherand, J. M. (2006). A Damage Directional Constitutive Model for Mullins Effect with Permanent Set and Induced Anisotropy. European Journal of Mechanics A/Solids, 25, 483-496.
[3] Guilie, J., Le, T. N., & Le Tallec, P. (2015). Microsphere Model for Strain-Induced Crystallization in Rubber. Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids, 81, 58-74.
[4] Tkachuk, M., & Linder, C. (2012). The Maximal Advance Path Constraint for the Homogenization of Materials with Random Network Microstructure. Philosophical Magazine, 92, 22, 2779-2808.
Biography
Patrick Le Tallec is a Professor in the Department of Mechanics at Ecole Polytechnique, France since 2004. His field of research is concerned with computational mechanics. A part of his career was devoted to Augmented Lagrangian and operator splitting methods in nonlinear mechanics, to the numerical analysis and simulation of nonlinear elastic problems, to domain decomposition techniques and to fluid structure interaction problems. His current interests concern the dynamics and control of nonlinear structures, the multiscale simulation of contact problems, and the development of multiscale and multimaterial modelling for nonlinear structures. Dr. Le Tallec published 7 books and monographs, 80 refereed papers for International Journals, 70 papers in Conference Proceedings, 24 additional research reports, and supervised 35 Ph.D. students. He is a member of the editorial board for Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, Computer and Structures. Dr. Le Tallec is the recipient of many prestigious awards, including Chevalier de la légion d'honneur (2004), Chevalier des Palmes Academiques (2010), Plenary Speaker at World Congress on Computational Mechanics (WCCM XI) in Barcelone (2014), and Officier de l'Ordre National du Mérite (2015).