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A finite element formulation for piezoelectric shell structures considering geometrical and material non-linearities

TL;DR: In this paper, an electro-mechanical coupled shell element is developed considering geometrically and materially non-linear behavior of ferroelectric ceramics, and the mixed formulation includes the independent fields of displacements, electric potential, strains, electric field, stresses, and dielectric displacements.
Abstract: In this paper, we present a non-linear finite element formulation for piezoelectric shell structures. Based on a mixed multi-field variational formulation, an electro-mechanical coupled shell element is developed considering geometrically and materially non-linear behavior of ferroelectric ceramics. The mixed formulation includes the independent fields of displacements, electric potential, strains, electric field, stresses, and dielectric displacements. Besides the mechanical degrees of freedom, the shell counts only one electrical degree of freedom. This is the difference in the electric potential in the thickness direction of the shell. Incorporating non-linear kinematic assumptions, structures with large deformations and stability problems can be analyzed. According to a Reissner–Mindlin theory, the shell element accounts for constant transversal shear strains. The formulation incorporates a three-dimensional transversal isotropic material law, thus the kinematic in the thickness direction of the shell is considered. The normal zero stress condition and the normal zero dielectric displacement condition of shells are enforced by the independent resultant stress and the resultant dielectric displacement fields. Accounting for material non-linearities, the ferroelectric hysteresis phenomena are considered using the Preisach model. As a special aspect, the formulation includes temperature-dependent effects and thus the change of the piezoelectric material parameters due to the temperature. This enables the element to describe temperature-dependent hysteresis curves. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Summary (5 min read)

1 Introduction

  • Piezoelectric material plays an important role for sensor and actuator devices.
  • In order to consider the nonlinear material behavior in a classical shell formulation, the strain and the electric field in thickness direction have to be comprised.
  • Thus, temperature can influence the performance of piezoelectric shell structures due to a change of the temperature dependent material parameters.
  • Here the change of the saturation parameters of the polarization and the strain due to temperature is phenomenologically included, thus temperature-dependent hysteresis curves can be determined.

2 Kinematics

  • The authors obtain the corresponding inextensible director vector d of the current configuration with the rotation tensor R by the orthogonal transformation d = RD.
  • Commas denote a partial differentiation with respect to the coordinates ξα.
  • Due to the shell geometry, the authors assume that the piezoelectric material is poled in thickness direction and the electrodes are arranged at the lower and upper surface.

3 Constitutive equations

  • The authors introduce linear constitutive equations with the Green-Lagrangean strain E, the Lagrangean electric field E, the second Piola-Kirchhoff stresses S, and the dielectric displacements D. Focusing on their material model, here they neglect thermal stresses and pyroelectric effects.
  • (8) The strains and the electric fields are summarized in the vector ε.
  • The three dimensional elasticity matrix , the permittivity matrix , and the piezoelectric coupling modulus are arranged in ̄.
  • In , the authors assume transversal isotropic material behavior with isotropy in the 23-plane, which can be specified with five independent parameters, see [44].
  • The stress and dielectric displacement in thickness direction are defined as zero, thus the authors fulfill the normal zero stress condition of shells.

4.1 Nonlinear constitutive equations

  • Ferroelectric ceramics show strong nonlinear behavior under high electric fields.
  • The imprinted initial polarization changes its direction under high electric loading and shows the dielectric hysteresis.
  • Thus, the linear constitutive behavior according to (8) has to be set up under consideration of the current state of polarization.
  • P i,rel characterizes the part of the piezoelectric material that shows a macroscopic polarization.
  • Since the switching effects of the ferroelectric domains can be treated as a volume conserving process, the irreversible strain Ei can be determined as proposed by Reference [25].

4.3 Interpretation for ferroelectric materials

  • To interpret the Preisach model for ferroelectric hysteresis phenomena, the input and output variables have to be identified.
  • The loading parameter for piezoelectric devices is the electric field E. With the parameter of the material specific saturation value of the electric field Esat the normalized value Erel is chosen as x(t) = Erel = ‖ E‖ Esat . (24) The corresponding output quantity is chosen as the normalized polarization P i,rel y(t) =.
  • As a phenomenological model, the Preisach concept adjusts the final hysteresis form by means of an experimental determined function.
  • For a detailed description and a discussion regarding the choice of the Preisach function see e.g. References [49, 50, 47, 51].
  • It is remarked that the polarization output value denotes the normalized irreversible polarization.

4.4 Temperature-dependent hysteresis

  • The influence of the temperature on the saturation parameter of the polarization P sat and the electric coercitive field Ec has been experimentally studied by Reference [37] for Pb(Zn1/3Nb2/3).
  • O3− PbT iO3 single crystals and by Reference [38] for PZT ceramics.
  • Following the experimental investigations in Reference [39] the authors assume a linear relation between the natural logarithms of the temperature and the saturation polarization.
  • As there do not exist sufficient test results, this influence has been neglected.

5 Variational formulation

  • The generalized stress tensor σ containing the second Piola-Kirchhoff stresses reads σ = 2∂CŴ (C).
  • The virtual quantities of v and the independently assumed strains, electric field, stresses, and dielectric displace- ments summarized in the generalized electromechanic fields ε̂(Ê, ̂E) and σ̂(Ŝ, ̂D) arrive to δv(δu, δω, δΔϕ), δε̂(δÊ, δ̂E) and δσ̂(δŜ, δ ̂D).

6 Finite element approximation

  • The finite element formulation models the shell structure by a reference surface.
  • The nodal position vector XI and the local cartesian coordinate system [A1I ,A2I ,A3I ] are generated with the mesh input.
  • Here, t3 represents the normal vector in the midpoint of the element.
  • The authors assume that the shell structure only counts for an electric potential in thickness direction of the shell by means of electrodes on the upper and lower surface of the shell.
  • The element has to fulfill the patch tests.

6.1 Interpolation of the assumed strains and electric field

  • The independent fields of the strains and the electric field are interpolated by ˆ̄ε =.
  • Here ˆ̄ε characterizes the complete vector of the assumed strains and the assumed electric fields, whereas ε̂ specifies the reduced vector without the components in thickness direction.
  • The area element dA = j dξdη is given with j(ξ, η) = |Xh,ξ ×Xh,η |. The matrix Neas contains parameters that are set orthogonal to the interpolations of the stresses, which is similar to the enhanced strain formulation given by Reference [54].

6.3 Approximation of the weak form and linearization

  • The authors incorporate the interpolations of the strains, the electric fields, the stress resultants, and the dielectric displacements in equation (58) and formulate the approximation of the variational formulation on element level as G(θ, δθ) = δvTe ∫ Ωe [ BTNσ β − fa ].
  • Considering nonlinear structural and material behavior, this formulation has to be linearized.
  • The authors simplify the formulation and define the following element matrices kg[18×18] = ∫.

6.4 Actuator formulation

  • In order to deal with the actuator use of piezoelectric shell structures, the authors postulate a linear distribution of the electric potential in thickness direction.
  • The authors write the corresponding electric field in thickness direction as the average value for every element.
  • According to the gradient relation, see equation (4), the electric potential is divided through the thickness.

7.1 Patchtests

  • The basic benchmark test of a finite element formulation is the well known patch test.
  • The test is passed if the formulation is able to display a state of constant stresses and constant dielectric displacements along with constant strains and a constant electric field for distributed element geometry.
  • The geometry of the quadratic patch with distorted elements inside the patch is shown in Figure 5.
  • For the shear test the same nodes are subjected to load F3 in 3-direction.
  • The loadings and the boundary conditions are depicted in Figure 5.

7.2 Piezoelectric bimorph

  • The piezoelectric bimorph is a well known piezoelectric benchmark test in order to proof the numerical formulation to the general applicability for sensor and actuator systems.
  • For the discretisation, five elements are chosen, which correspond to five pairs of electrodes that are put along the length of the cantilever.
  • Due to the deflection, an electric potential arises.
  • The element ”H8D” has independent variables for the displacement, the electric potential and the dielectric displacements, in ”H8DS” also the stresses are included.
  • The present shell element does not show any shear locking, thus the results fit the analytical solution even for strong distorted meshes.

7.3 90◦ cylindrical shell

  • The system, see Figure 9, consists of four graphite epoxy layers, for which the authors account the orientation angles ϕF with [0/90/90/0] referring to the x axis.
  • The geometry and the material parameters for the graphite epoxy and PZT layers according to Balamurugan and Narayanan [64] are given in Table 2.
  • The radial system displacement w is measured along the centerline at b/2.
  • The authors compare the present shell formulation with data from Balamurugan and Narayanan [64] for a degenerated nine-node quadrilateral shell element with quadratic approach for the electric potential in thickness direction and with Saravanos [65] who provides a laminated eight-node shell element with lineare electric thickness potential.
  • The good accordance of the results shows the reliable applicability of the present laminated four node formulation for layered piezo-mechanical structures.

7.4 Steering of an antenna

  • The authors show two versions of an antenna that can be manipulated via piezoelectric devices.
  • Two piezoelectric patches with the width b and the length l are arranged with the distance a from the small hole of 2◦ in the middle of the antenna shell.
  • The authors compare those results to the experimental data and a numerical calculation with a reduced eight-node element by Gupta et al. [67].
  • Figure 12(b) shows the displacement curve dependent on the angle around the middle axis of the antenna.
  • Here, the authors distinguish between the following loading cases 1.

7.5 Test of the Preisach model for ferroelectric hysteresis

  • In order to validate the results of the temperature-dependent Preisach model for the ferro- electric hysteresis effects, a simple material cube made of soft PZT with an edge length a, see Figure 16, is chosen.
  • Besides experimental results also a micro-mechanical model is introduced in [36].
  • For the micro-mechanical calculation, the material paramters in [36] are derived from the single crystal parameters of barium titanate and are modified via a correction parameter to get the material parameter of soft PZT single crystal.
  • Figure 17 presents the dielectric hysteresis and the butterfly hysteresis for a temperature of 25◦C.
  • However above the saturation values the reversible part is underestimated.

7.6 Piezoelectric ceramic disc

  • A thin piezoelectric PZT ceramic disc is introduced by Yimnirun et al. [38] who gives experimental results for the temperature-dependent polarization behavior, see Figure 19.
  • For the numerical calculation the authors choose the three representative temperatures 298K, 373K and 453K.
  • To simplify the calculation, the authors additionally introduce a small hole at the disc center characterized by the diameter d2, which lets the polarization change unaffected and thus does not influence the dielectric hysteresis curve.
  • The missing parameters of the permittivity are added from experienced data.
  • The reversible polarization is underestimated compared to the experiment and shows a nonlinear behavior.

7.7 Telescopic cylinder

  • The quite small displacements of piezoelectric structures can be enlarged by special architectures.
  • With several nested cylinders, which are alternately connected at the top and the bottom, actuators with much higher displacements and be composed.
  • The radii of the cylinders numerated from the inner to the outer tube are r1, r2, r3, r4 and r5 and correspond to the middle surface of every cylinder.
  • With respect to the material nonlinear behavior, it results a hysteresis curve for the maximal displacement w, which is displayed in Figure 22 together with the experimental data from [69].
  • An open question is how the experimental results reach the initial value of the remanent displacement again after −1200V for the first subhysteresis ±300V .

8 Conclusions

  • The authors have presented a piezoelectric finite shell element.
  • The mixed hybrid formulation includes independent thickness strains, which allows a consideration of three-dimensional nonlinear constitutive equations.
  • By means of a temperature-dependent Preisach model the authors consider the actual polarization state and thus they incorporate ferroelectric hysteresis phenomena.
  • With only one electrical degree of freedom, the formulation simulates the behavior of both piezoelectric sensor and actuator systems appropriately.
  • The presented examples show the influence of the temperature for the ferroelectric nonlinear behavior.

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Karlsruher Institut f
¨
ur Technologie
Institut f
¨
ur Baustatik
A Finite element formulation for
piezoelectric shell structures considering
geometrical and material nonlinearities
K. Schulz, S. Klinkel, W. Wagner
Mitteilung 3(2010)
BAUSTATIK

Karlsruher Institut f
¨
ur Technologie
Institut f
¨
ur Baustatik
A Finite element formulation for
piezoelectric shell structures considering
geometrical and material nonlinearities
K. Schulz, S. Klinkel, W. Wagner
Mitteilung 3(2010)
BAUSTATIK
c
Prof. Dr.–Ing. W. Wagner Telefon: (0721) 608–2280
Institut f
¨
ur Baustatik Telefax: (0721) 608–6015
Karlsruher Institut f
¨
ur Technologie E–mail: info@ibs.kit.edu
Kaiserstr. 12 Internet: http://www.ibs.kit.edu
76131 Karlsruhe

A Finite element formulation for piezoelectric shell structures
considering geometrical and material nonlinearities
K. Schulz
[1]
,S.Klinkel
[2]
and W. Wagner
[1]
[1 ]Karlsruhe Institute of Technology(KIT), Institute for Structural Analysis, Kaiserstr.12, 76131 Karl-
sruhe, Germany
[2 ]Statik u. Dynamik d. Tragwerke, Technische Universit¨at Kaiserslautern, Paul-Ehrlich-Str. 14, D-
67663 Kaiserslautern, Germany
Abstract In this paper we present a nonlinear finite element formulation for piezoelectric
shell structures. Based on a mixed multi field variational formulation, an electro-mechanical
coupled shell element is developed considering geometrically and materially nonlinear behavior
of ferroelectric ceramics. The mixed formulation includes the independent fields of displace-
ments, electric potential, strains, electric field, stresses, and dielectric displacements. Besides
the mechanical degrees of freedom, the shell counts only one electrical degree of freedom.
This is the difference of the electric potential in thickness direction of the shell. Incorporating
nonlinear kinematic assumptions, structures with large deformations and stability problems
can be analyzed. According to a Reissner-Mindlin theory, the shell element accounts for con-
stant transversal shear strains. The formulation incorporates a three-dimensional transversal
isotropic material law, thus the kinematic in thickness direction of the shell is considered.
The normal zero stress condition and the normal zero dielectric displacement condition of
shells are enforced by the independent resultant stress and resultant dielectric displacement
fields. Accounting for material nonlinearities, the ferroelectric hysteresis phenomena are con-
sidered using the Preisach model. As a special aspect, the formulation includes temperature-
dependent effects and thus the change of the piezoelectric material parameters due to the
temperature. This enables the element to describe temperature dependent hysteresis curves.
1 Introduction
Piezoelectric material plays an important role for sensor and actuator devices. In the course
of optimization of systems, shell structures have become more and more interesting. In recent
years, several piezoelectric shell formulations based on the finite element method have been
introduced. One can distinguish between solid shell elements, see e.g. References [1, 2, 3],
and classical formulations, which model the shell by a reference surface, see e.g. References
[4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]. Some of these element formulations are restricted to shallow shell
structures, [5, 6, 9, 11], where the initial shell curvature is assumed to be small. In order to
consider laminated structures, the above mentioned formulations include a more or less sophis-
ticated laminate theory. References [5, 10, 12, 13, 14] point out that geometrically nonlinear
characteristics can significantly influence the performance of piezoelectric systems, especially
for the sensor usage. A geometrically nonlinear theory that incorporates large rotations is
presented in References [1, 5, 6, 12]. A common assumption in piezoelectric models is that
the electric eld is constant through the thickness. This is not correct for bending dominated
problems. According to Reference [15], a quadratic approach for the electric potential through
the thickness is necessary to fulfill the electric charge conservation law. Shell formulations
incorporating a quadratic thickness potential can be found in References [16, 8, 7]. Mixed
1

shell formulations including independent fields for the electric potential, the electric field, the
dielectric displacement as well as the mechanical fields of the displacement, the strain, and
the stress can be found in [19].
Accounting for nonlinear material behavior, the polarization state has to be analyzed. Due
to high electric fields, ferroelectric switching processes take place and the material proper-
ties change. To consider the resultant ferroelectric hysteresis phenomena, one can refer to
microscopic models, see References [20, 21], and macroscopic models, see e.g. References
[22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28]. Microscopic analysis looks at single crystals and models the
switching process via an energy criterion. A macroscopic approach using a switching criterion
based on thermodynamic energy function is presented in [22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27]. Macro-
scopic phenomenological hysteresis models can be found in Reference [28]. A well known
phenomenological model is the Preisach model, see Reference [47]. Several piezo-mechanical
coupled formulations have used the Preisach model to display piezoelectric material behavior,
see References [30, 31, 32]. A shell element that accounts for material nonlinearities is [33]; it
is based on a phenomenological switching function. In order to consider the nonlinear material
behavior in a classical shell formulation, the strain and the electric field in thickness direction
have to be comprised. A classical mechanical shell element incorporating three dimensional
constitutive equations is e.g. proposed by Reference [34]. The influence of the temperature on
piezoelectric material behavior has been studied experimentally in References [36, 37, 38, 39].
[39] shows that the ferroelectric hysteresis curves become smaller with increasing temperature.
A micropolar model to consider the temperature-dependent relation between the electric field
and the polarization is introduced by [40]. Here, the influence of mechanical stress is neglected
and there is no remark on the strain behavior. A simple one-dimensional phenomenological
model considering the strain is presented in Reference [41]. The authors assume a volume
part of paraelectric phase for every hysteresis. [35] presents a piezoelectric plate element
considering the deformation of a linear temperature gradient through the thickness, and gives
the results depending on the piezoelectric material parameters for different temperature lev-
els. Thus, temperature can influence the performance of piezoelectric shell structures due to
a change of the temperature dependent material parameters. The essentiell aspects of the
piezoelectric shell formulation presented in this paper are the following:
(i) The bilinear, four-node shell element is based on a six field variational functional. Be-
sides the six mechanical degrees of freedom, three displacements and three rotations, the
only electrical degree of freedom is the difference of the electric potential in thickness
direction;
(ii) The element includes nonlinear kinematic assumptions, thus a geometric nonlinear anal-
ysis becomes feasible;
(iii) The formulation incorporates three dimensional transversal isotropic constitutive equa-
tions. In the shell formulation a linear approach for both the strain and the electric
field in thickness direction is considered;
(iv) Using the Preisach model, the material nonlinear ferroelectric hysteresis effects are in-
corporated. Here the change of the saturation parameters of the polarization and the
strain due to temperature is phenomenologically included, thus temperature-dependent
hysteresis curves can be determined.
2

2 Kinematics
We model the shell by a reference surface Ω with the boundary Γ. Every point of Ω is part
of the Euklidean space B. In order to display the geometry of the structure in B,wedenote
a convected coordinate system of the body ξ
i
andanoriginO with the global cartesian
coordinate system e
i
. The initial thickness of the shell in the reference configuration is given
as h, thus we define the arbitrary reference surface by the thickness coordinate ξ
3
=0with
h
ξ
3
h
+
. X(ξ
1
2
)andx(ξ
1
2
) denote the position vectors of the shell surface Ω by
means of the convective coordinates in the reference and the current configuration respectively.
The covariant tangent vectors for the reference and the current configuration, A
i
and a
i
,are
given as
A
i
=
X
∂ξ
i
, a
i
=
x
∂ξ
i
,i=1, 2, 3 . (1)
The contravariant basis A
i
is defined by the orthogonality δ
j
i
= A
i
· A
j
. The director vector
D(ξ
1
2
)with|D(ξ
1
2
)| = 1 is given perpendicular to Ω. It holds D = A
3
. We obtain the
corresponding inextensible director vector d of the current configuration with the rotation
tensor R by the orthogonal transformation d = RD. In the following, we refer to the notation
that Latin indices range from 1 to 3 and Greek indices range from 1 to 2, whereas we use
the summation convention for repeated indices. Commas denote a partial differentiation with
respect to the coordinates ξ
α
. A displacement u can be determined by the difference of the
current and the initial position vectors u = x X. Including a Reissner-Mindlin kinematic,
we consider transverse shear strain, thus it holds d · x,
α
= 0. For the geometric in-plane and
thickness strains we assume
E
αβ
= ε
αβ
+ ξ
3
κ
αβ
2E
α3
= γ
α
E
33
=0 .
(2)
We write the membrane strains ε
αβ
, the curvatures κ
αβ
, and the shear strains γ
α
of the shell,
see Reference [42], as
ε
αβ
=
1
2
(x,
α
·x,
β
X,
α
·X,
β
)
κ
αβ
=
1
2
(x,
α
·d,
β
+x,
β
·d,
α
X,
α
·D,
β
X,
β
·D,
α
)
γ
α
= x,
α
·d X,
α
·D .
(3)
The electric field
E =
E
1
E
2
E
3
T
is given as the gradient field of the electric potential
ϕ. Due to the shell geometry, we assume that the piezoelectric material is poled in thickness
direction and the electrodes are arranged at the lower and upper surface. Therefore, we only
consider the difference of the electric potential in thickness direction of the shell Δϕ and write
the geometric electric field
E
g
=
E
1
E
2
0
T
as
E
g
=
Δϕ
∂ξ
i
A
i
. (4)
We summarize the strains and the electric field of the shell in a generalized geometric strain
vector ε
g
(v)
ε
g
(v)=[ε
11
22
, 2ε
12
11
22
, 2κ
12
1
2
,
E
1
,
E
2
]
T
. (5)
3

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  • ...Although several macroscale formulations were developed for piezoelectric shell elements [27, 12, 13], computational homogenization of shells is only recently receiving major attention [6]....

    [...]

  • ...3, following [27], which in turn is largely based on Naghdi’s theory for the mechanical part [33, 36]....

    [...]

  • ...where 33, (1)33 are the constant and linear components of the thickness strain, while ~ E3, ~ E(1)3 represent the constant and linear parts of the electric field in the thickness direction [27]....

    [...]

  • ...For more details, see the original paper [27]....

    [...]

  • ...Herein, a linear approximation is adopted, which is sufficient to pass the out-of-plane bending patch test [27]....

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  • ...Schulz et al. (2011) and Zemčı́k et al. (2007) proposed a high-performance four-node flat shell element with piezoelectric coupling for the dynamic analysis of lightweight smart shell structures....

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a finite element model is developed for piezoelectric actuated shell structures, based on Ahmad's reduced shell element, and experimental results have been shown to match well.
Abstract: In the recent years, research on the use of piezoelectric actuators for shape and vibration control of structures has been gaining prominence. Analytical and finite element models have been developed to analyze structures under piezoelectric actuation, but experimental studies, particularly on curved structures, are limited. In the current study, a finite element model is developed for piezoelectric actuated shell structures, based on Ahmad’s reduced shell element. Experiments have been conducted on a number of structures like straight beams, curved beams, and shells. Finite element and experimental results have been shown to match well. Nonlinear behavior has been observed in the experiments, particularly at higher fields, and complete hysteresis loops have been presented. The finite element is then applied to the study of deformation of a typical paraboloid shell (representative antenna shell) under piezoelectric actuation. It has been shown that piezoelectric actuation can be used to induce desired deformation shapes in the antenna shell, which result in beam steering and shaping.

39 citations

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TL;DR: A constrained theory of shells by a direct approach, based on a general theory of a Cosserat surface, is derived and its relation to other recent developments obtained by direct procedures is indicated.
Abstract: A constrained theory of shells by a direct approach, based on a general theory of a Cosserat surface, is derived and its relation to other recent developments obtained by direct procedures is indicated.

34 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...We write the membrane strains εαβ, the curvatures καβ , and the shear strains γα of the shell, see Reference [42], as...

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a modified geometric interpretation and numerical implementation method for the Preisach model was presented for the hysteresis modeling of piezoceramic actuator system.
Abstract: This paper discusses the adaptation of the Preisach model to describe the hysteresis behavior of piezoceramic actuator system and presents a modified geometric interpretation and numerical implementation method for the Preisach model especially for the hysteresis modeling of piezoceramic actuator system. The demagnetized-state, which refers both input and output equal zero state, and the generalized demagnetized-state are used as the basis of Preisach model rather the saturation states. Experiments on the hysteresis behavior of a piezoceramic actuator were carried out and the experimental measurements are compared with the hysteresis predictions. The comparison results verify the application of the modified Preisach model to piezoceramic material system.

32 citations


"A finite element formulation for pi..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...Several piezo-mechanical coupled formulations have used the Preisach model to display piezoelectric material behavior, see References [30, 31, 32]....

    [...]

  • ...Several piezo-mechanical coupled formulations have used the Preisach model to display piezoelectric material behavior, see References [28–30]....

    [...]

  • ...References [5, 10, 12–14] point out that geometrically non-linear characteristics can significantly influence the performance of piezoelectric systems, especially for the sensor usage....

    [...]

  • ...The influence of temperature on the piezoelectric material behavior has been studied experimentally in References [33–36]....

    [...]

  • ...For a detailed description of thermal effects and its impact on the piezoelectric response, as e.q. thermal buckling, see References [6, 41]....

    [...]

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TL;DR: In this article, the first-order derivatives of complex eigenvectors for general non-defective eigensystems have been investigated and a new normalization condition is proposed, with which they can compute unique firstorder derivatives.
Abstract: In this paper, we investigate the computation of the first-order derivatives of complex eigenvectors for general non-defective eigensystems. A new normalization condition is proposed, with which we can compute unique first-order derivatives of arbitrary differentiable eigenvectors of systems with distinct and repeated eigenvalues. We also present an efficient algorithm to compute the particular solutions to the governing equations of the first-order derivatives of eigenvectors. Finally, numerical examples are included to demonstrate the validity of the proposed method. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

29 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a theoretical framework is presented for analyzing the coupled non-linear response of shallow doubly curved adaptive laminated piezoelectric shells undergoing large displacements and rotations.
Abstract: A theoretical framework is presented for analysing the coupled non-linear response of shallow doubly curved adaptive laminated piezoelectric shells undergoing large displacements and rotations. The formulated mechanics incorporate coupling between in-plane and flexural stiffness terms due to geometric curvature, coupling between mechanical and electric fields, and encompass geometric non-linearity effects due to large displacements and rotations. The governing equations are formulated explicitly in orthogonal curvilinear co-ordinates and are combined with the kinematic assumptions of a mixed-field shear-layerwise shell laminate theory. Based on the above formulation, a finite element methodology together with an incremental-iterative technique, based on Newton–Raphson method is formulated. An eight-node coupled non-linear shell element is also developed. Various evaluation cases on laminated curved beams and cylindrical panels illustrate the capability of the shell finite element to predict the complex non-linear behaviour of active shell structures including buckling, which is not captured by linear shell models. The numerical results also show the inherent capability of piezoelectric shell structures to actively induce large displacements through piezoelectric actuators, by jumping between multiple equilibrium states. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

28 citations


"A finite element formulation for pi..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Several piezo-mechanical coupled formulations have used the Preisach model to display piezoelectric material behavior, see References [28–30]....

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  • ...References [5, 10, 12–14] point out that geometrically non-linear characteristics can significantly influence the performance of piezoelectric systems, especially for the sensor usage....

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  • ...The influence of temperature on the piezoelectric material behavior has been studied experimentally in References [33–36]....

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  • ...References [5, 10, 12, 13, 14] point out that geometrically nonlinear characteristics can significantly influence the performance of piezoelectric systems, especially for the sensor usage....

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  • ...For a detailed description of thermal effects and its impact on the piezoelectric response, as e.q. thermal buckling, see References [6, 41]....

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