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I.2 Fundamental Definitions

The document discusses the hypothesis of continuity in continuum mechanics. It states that continuity assumes material behavior does not change with diminishing dimensions and that a material can be viewed as points with zero dimensions having identical properties. The validity of continuity depends on discontinuity size compared to analyzed geometrical dimensions. Continuity usually applies to liquids but must be examined more carefully for solids like concrete where discontinuities may be similar in size to dimensions under analysis. Gases may not satisfy continuity if rarefied. The theory presented accepts the continuity hypothesis to define material behavior independent of body or mass size.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views1 page

I.2 Fundamental Definitions

The document discusses the hypothesis of continuity in continuum mechanics. It states that continuity assumes material behavior does not change with diminishing dimensions and that a material can be viewed as points with zero dimensions having identical properties. The validity of continuity depends on discontinuity size compared to analyzed geometrical dimensions. Continuity usually applies to liquids but must be examined more carefully for solids like concrete where discontinuities may be similar in size to dimensions under analysis. Gases may not satisfy continuity if rarefied. The theory presented accepts the continuity hypothesis to define material behavior independent of body or mass size.

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4

I Introduction

From a mathematical point of view, the hypothesis of continuity may be expressed by stating that the functions which describe the forces inside the material, the displacements, the deformations, etc., are continuous functions of space and time. From a physical point of view, this hypothesis corresponds to assuming that the macroscopically observed material behaviour does not change with the dimensions of the piece of material considered, especially when they tend to zero. This is equivalent to accepting that the material is a mass of points with zero dimensions and all with the same properties. The validity of this hypothesis is fundamentally related to the size of the smallest geometrical dimension that must be analysed, as compared with the maximum dimension of the discontinuities actually present in the material. Thus, in a liquid, the maximum dimension of the discontinuities is the size of a molecule, which is almost always much smaller than the smallest geometrical dimension that must be analysed. This is why, in liquids, the hypothesis of continuity may almost always be used without restrictions. On the other side, in solid materials, the validity of this hypothesis must be analysed more carefully. In fact, although in a metal the size of the crystals is usually much smaller than the smallest geometrical dimension that must be analysed, in other materials like concrete, for example, the minimum dimension that must be analysed is often of the same order of magnitude as the maximum size of the discontinuities, which may be represented by the maximum dimension of the aggregates or by the distance between cracks. In gases, the maximum dimension of the discontinuities may be represented by the distance between molecules. Thus, in very rareed gases the hypothesis of continuity may not be acceptable. In the theory expounded in the rst part of this book the validity of the hypothesis of continuity is always accepted. This allows the material behaviour to be dened independently of the geometrical dimensions of the solid body of the liquid mass under consideration. For this reason, the matters studied here are integrated into Continuum Mechanics.

I.2 Fundamental Denitions


In the Theory of Structures, actions on the structural elements are dened as everything which may cause forces inside the material, deformations, accelerations, etc., or change its mechanical properties or its internal structure. In accordance with this denition, examples of actions are the forces acting on a body, the imposed displacements, the temperature variations, the chemical aggressions, the time (in the sense that is causes aging and that it is involved in viscous deformations), etc. In the theory expounded here we consider mainly the eects of applied forces, imposed displacements and temperature. Some basic concepts are used frequently throughout this book, so it is worthwhile dening them at the beginning. Thus, we dene:

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