TY - JOUR
T1 - Snap-through of an elastica under bilateral displacement control at a material point
AU - Wang, Q.
AU - Zou, H. L.
AU - Deng, Z. C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, The Chinese Society of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2020/6/1
Y1 - 2020/6/1
N2 - Snap-through phenomenon widely occurs for elastic systems, where the systems lose stability at critical points. Here snap-through of an elastica under bilateral displacement control at a material point is studied, by regarding the whole elastica as two components, i.e., pinned-clamped elasticas. Specifically, stiffness−curvature curves of two pinned-clamped elasticas are firstly efficiently located based on the second-order mode, which are used to determine the shapes of two components. Similar transformations are used to assemble two components together to form the whole elastica, which reveals four kinds of shapes. One advantage of this way compared with other methods such as the shooting method is that multiple coexisting solutions can be located accurately. On the load−deflection curves, four branches correspond to four kinds of shapes and first two branches are symmetrical to the last two branches relative to the original point. For the bilateral displacement control, the critical points can only appear at saddle-node bifurcations, which is different to that for the unilateral displacement control. Specifically, one critical point is found on the first branch and two critical points are found on the secondary branch. In addition, the snap-through among different branches can be well explained with these critical points.
AB - Snap-through phenomenon widely occurs for elastic systems, where the systems lose stability at critical points. Here snap-through of an elastica under bilateral displacement control at a material point is studied, by regarding the whole elastica as two components, i.e., pinned-clamped elasticas. Specifically, stiffness−curvature curves of two pinned-clamped elasticas are firstly efficiently located based on the second-order mode, which are used to determine the shapes of two components. Similar transformations are used to assemble two components together to form the whole elastica, which reveals four kinds of shapes. One advantage of this way compared with other methods such as the shooting method is that multiple coexisting solutions can be located accurately. On the load−deflection curves, four branches correspond to four kinds of shapes and first two branches are symmetrical to the last two branches relative to the original point. For the bilateral displacement control, the critical points can only appear at saddle-node bifurcations, which is different to that for the unilateral displacement control. Specifically, one critical point is found on the first branch and two critical points are found on the secondary branch. In addition, the snap-through among different branches can be well explained with these critical points.
KW - Buckling
KW - Critical points
KW - Displacement control
KW - Elastica
KW - Snap-through
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85083520263
U2 - 10.1007/s10409-020-00937-4
DO - 10.1007/s10409-020-00937-4
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85083520263
SN - 0567-7718
VL - 36
SP - 727
EP - 734
JO - Acta Mechanica Sinica/Lixue Xuebao
JF - Acta Mechanica Sinica/Lixue Xuebao
IS - 3
ER -