Vibrations of Linear Piezostructures. Andrew J. Kurdila

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be used to understand the basic physics of piezoelectric sensors too. They illustrate the operating principles of and modeling techniques for piezoelectric composites that are evident in much more complex designs.

      Unfortunately, the theoretical underpinnings of piezoelectric mechanics embraces a wide collection of fields of study that must be synthesized. We begin in Chapter 2. Section 2.1 reviews the fundamentals of vectors, bases, and frames of reference. This section is vital in developing an understanding of how physical vectors such as velocity, acceleration, stress vectors, electric field vectors, and electric displacement vectors are represented. The section culminates in a presentation of rotation matrices and their essential role in constructing change of bases for different representations of vectors. Section 2.2 then extends these results by introducing multilinear operators, or tensors, that act between vector spaces. Since vectors are first order tensors, they are a special case of the tensors presented in Section 2.2. In addition, another collection of physical variables critical to linear piezoelectricity are understood as tensors. These include the stress tensor, linear strain tensor, permittivity tensor, piezoelectric coupling tensor, stiffness tensor, and compliance tensor. The section concludes with a discussion of the role of rotation matrices in the representation and change of basis formula for n Superscript t h order tensors. Section 2.3 discusses symmetry properties and geometric properties of tensors and crystals. The discussion begins with an overview of the geometry of crystals in Section 2.3.1. The 14 Bravais lattices and seven crystal systems are defined, as are the 32 crystallographic point groups. This section concludes with examples of symmetry transformations for typical crystal classes, and a discussion of tensor invariance associated with symmetry operations.

      We turn to a discussion of continuum electrodynamics in Chapter 4. Charge and current are introduced in Section 4.1, and the static electric and magnetic fields are discussed in Section 4.2. Maxwell's equations are introduced in Equation 4.10 in SI units. Section 4.3.1 relates the polarization and electric displacement vectors, and relates them to bound and mobile charge, respectively. Magnetization and magnetic field intensity are defined in Section 4.3.2, as are the free, bound, and polarization current densities, respectively. Section 4.3.3 discusses the form of Maxwell's equations in Gaussian units, which prove to be convenient for the derivation of the equations of piezoelectricity.

      Chapter 5 presents the theory of linear piezoelectricity, starting with some one dimensional examples in Section 5.1. Section 5.2 gives the detailed account of how the equations of linear piezoelectricity are derived from Maxwell's equations, and Section 5.2.2 summarizes the initial‐boundary value problem of linear piezoelectricity. Section 5.3 surveys the role of thermodynamics in the construction of various equivalent constitutive laws and their associated thermodynamic invariants. The structure of the constitutive laws generated by crystalline materials having different symmetry operations is described in Section 5.4.

      Chapter 6 focuses on the use of Newton's method to derive the governing equations for linearly piezoelectric composite structures. The axial actuator model, which is a prototype for the linear actuators of the type depicted in Figure 1.8, is treated in Sections 6.1 and 6.2. Section 6.3 presents an analysis of the beam actuator as shown in the introduction in Figure 1.9. Section 6.4 uses Newton's method to derive the governing equations for a simplified model of piezoelectric composite plate bending.

      Chapter 7 introduces powerful variational methods for deriving the governing equations of piezoelectric structures. The chapter begins with a review of variational calculus in Chapter 7.1. Hamilton's principle for mechanical systems is introduced in Section 7.2, and its generalization for linear piezoelectricity is presented in Section 7.3. The strength of these variational techniques is illustrated in Section 7.4, which shows how variational methods for electromechanical systems that consist of piezoelectric structures and attached ideal circuits can be modeled. Various authors have discussed variational methods for electromechanical systems over the years, and Section 7.5 discusses the relationships among some alternative forms of these principles. Section 7.6 illustrates how the electromechanical variational principle can be applied using Lagrangian densities German upper L instead of Lagrangian functions script upper L.

      The Appendix contains three sections that provide supplementary material for the discussions throughout the text. Section S.1 gives a streamlined summary of the basic background for vibrations theory for single degree of freedom (SDOF) systems, distributed parameter systems (DPS), and multi‐DOF (MDOF) systems. A supplementary account of tensor analysis is given in Section S.2. For those students seeking to understand the simplified version of tensor analysis covered in Chapter 2, this section shows how the simplified account fits in the general theory. Finally, Section S.3 discusses details regarding distributional and weak derivatives beyond the brief account in

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