xref: /libCEED/examples/solids/index.md (revision 68e843ee0303723bf2ec95aa2ac2af8f169174e7)
1(example-petsc-elasticity)=
2
3# Solid mechanics mini-app
4
5This example is located in the subdirectory {file}`examples/solids`.
6It solves the steady-state static momentum balance equations using unstructured high-order finite/spectral element spatial discretizations.
7As for the {ref}`example-petsc-navier-stokes` case, the solid mechanics elasticity example has been developed using PETSc, so that the pointwise physics (defined at quadrature points) is separated from the parallelization and meshing concerns.
8
9In this mini-app, we consider three formulations used in solid mechanics applications: linear elasticity, Neo-Hookean hyperelasticity at small strain, and Neo-Hookean hyperelasticity at finite strain.
10We provide the strong and weak forms of static balance of linear momentum in the small strain and finite strain regimes.
11The stress-strain relationship (constitutive law) for each of the material models is provided.
12Due to the nonlinearity of material models in Neo-Hookean hyperelasticity, the Newton linearization of the material models is provided.
13
14:::{note}
15Linear elasticity and small-strain hyperelasticity can both by obtained from the finite-strain hyperelastic formulation by linearization of geometric and constitutive nonlinearities.
16The effect of these linearizations is sketched in the diagram below, where $\bm \sigma$ and $\bm \epsilon$ are stress and strain, respectively, in the small strain regime, while $\bm S$ and $\bm E$ are their finite-strain generalizations (second Piola-Kirchoff tensor and Green-Lagrange strain tensor, respectively) defined in the initial configuration, and $\mathsf C$ is a linearized constitutive model.
17
18$$
19\begin{CD}
20  {\overbrace{\bm S(\bm E)}^{\text{Finite Strain Hyperelastic}}}
21  @>{\text{constitutive}}>{\text{linearization}}>
22  {\overbrace{\bm S = \mathsf C \bm E}^{\text{St. Venant-Kirchoff}}} \\
23  @V{\text{geometric}}V{\begin{smallmatrix}\bm E \to \bm \epsilon \\ \bm S \to \bm \sigma \end{smallmatrix}}V
24  @V{\begin{smallmatrix}\bm E \to \bm \epsilon \\ \bm S \to \bm \sigma \end{smallmatrix}}V{\text{geometric}}V \\
25  {\underbrace{\bm \sigma(\bm \epsilon)}_\text{Small Strain Hyperelastic}}
26  @>{\text{constitutive}}>\text{linearization}>
27  {\underbrace{\bm \sigma = \mathsf C \bm \epsilon}_\text{Linear Elastic}}
28\end{CD}
29$$ (hyperelastic-cd)
30:::
31
32(running-elasticity)=
33
34## Running the mini-app
35
36```{include} README.md
37:start-after: inclusion-solids-marker
38```
39
40(problem-linear-elasticity)=
41
42## Linear Elasticity
43
44The strong form of the static balance of linear momentum at small strain for the three-dimensional linear elasticity problem is given by {cite}`hughes2012finite`:
45
46$$
47\nabla \cdot \bm{\sigma} + \bm{g} = \bm{0}
48$$ (lin-elas)
49
50where $\bm{\sigma}$ and $\bm{g}$ are stress and forcing functions, respectively.
51We multiply {math:numref}`lin-elas` by a test function $\bm v$ and integrate the divergence term by parts to arrive at the weak form: find $\bm u \in \mathcal V \subset H^1(\Omega)$ such that
52
53$$
54\int_{\Omega}{ \nabla \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{\sigma}} \, dV
55- \int_{\partial \Omega}{\bm{v} \cdot \left(\bm{\sigma} \cdot \hat{\bm{n}}\right)} \, dS
56- \int_{\Omega}{\bm{v} \cdot \bm{g}} \, dV
57= 0, \quad \forall \bm v \in \mathcal V,
58$$ (lin-elas-weak)
59
60where $\bm{\sigma} \cdot \hat{\bm{n}}|_{\partial \Omega}$ is replaced by an applied force/traction boundary condition written in terms of the initial configuration.
61When inhomogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions are present, $\mathcal V$ is an affine space that satisfies those boundary conditions.
62
63### Constitutive modeling
64
65In their most general form, constitutive models define $\bm \sigma$ in terms of state variables.
66In the model taken into consideration in the present mini-app, the state variables are constituted by the vector displacement field $\bm u$, and its gradient $\nabla \bm u$.
67We begin by defining the symmetric (small/infintesimal) strain tensor as
68
69$$
70\bm{\epsilon} = \dfrac{1}{2}\left(\nabla \bm{u} + \nabla \bm{u}^T \right).
71$$ (small-strain)
72
73This constitutive model $\bm \sigma(\bm \epsilon)$ is a linear tensor-valued function of a tensor-valued input, but we will consider the more general nonlinear case in other models below.
74In these cases, an arbitrary choice of such a function will generally not be invariant under orthogonal transformations and thus will not admissible as a physical model must not depend on the coordinate system chosen to express it.
75In particular, given an orthogonal transformation $Q$, we desire
76
77$$
78Q \bm \sigma(\bm \epsilon) Q^T = \bm \sigma(Q \bm \epsilon Q^T),
79$$ (elastic-invariance)
80
81which means that we can change our reference frame before or after computing $\bm \sigma$, and get the same result either way.
82Constitutive relations in which $\bm \sigma$ is uniquely determined by $\bm \epsilon$ while satisfying the invariance property {math:numref}`elastic-invariance` are known as Cauchy elastic materials.
83Here, we define a strain energy density functional $\Phi(\bm \epsilon) \in \mathbb R$ and obtain the strain energy from its gradient,
84
85$$
86\bm \sigma(\bm \epsilon) = \frac{\partial \Phi}{\partial \bm \epsilon}.
87$$ (strain-energy-grad)
88
89:::{note}
90The strain energy density functional cannot be an arbitrary function $\Phi(\bm \epsilon)$; it can only depend on *invariants*, scalar-valued functions $\gamma$ satisfying
91
92$$
93\gamma(\bm \epsilon) = \gamma(Q \bm \epsilon Q^T)
94$$
95
96for all orthogonal matrices $Q$.
97:::
98
99For the linear elasticity model, the strain energy density is given by
100
101$$
102\bm{\Phi} = \frac{\lambda}{2} (\operatorname{trace} \bm{\epsilon})^2 + \mu \bm{\epsilon} : \bm{\epsilon} .
103$$
104
105The constitutive law (stress-strain relationship) is therefore given by its gradient,
106
107$$
108\bm\sigma = \lambda (\operatorname{trace} \bm\epsilon) \bm I_3 + 2 \mu \bm\epsilon,
109$$
110
111where $\bm I_3$ is the $3 \times 3$ identity matrix, the colon represents a double contraction (over both indices of $\bm \epsilon$), and the Lamé parameters are given by
112
113$$
114\begin{aligned} \lambda &= \frac{E \nu}{(1 + \nu)(1 - 2 \nu)} \\ \mu &= \frac{E}{2(1 + \nu)} \end{aligned}.
115$$
116
117The constitutive law (stress-strain relationship) can also be written as
118
119$$
120\bm{\sigma} = \mathsf{C} \!:\! \bm{\epsilon}.
121$$ (linear-stress-strain)
122
123For notational convenience, we express the symmetric second order tensors $\bm \sigma$ and $\bm \epsilon$ as vectors of length 6 using the [Voigt notation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voigt_notation).
124Hence, the fourth order elasticity tensor $\mathsf C$ (also known as elastic moduli tensor or material stiffness tensor) can be represented as
125
126$$
127\mathsf C = \begin{pmatrix}
128\lambda + 2\mu & \lambda & \lambda & & & \\
129\lambda & \lambda + 2\mu & \lambda & & & \\
130\lambda & \lambda & \lambda + 2\mu & & & \\
131& & & \mu & & \\
132& & & & \mu & \\
133& & & & & \mu
134\end{pmatrix}.
135$$ (linear-elasticity-tensor)
136
137Note that the incompressible limit $\nu \to \frac 1 2$ causes $\lambda \to \infty$, and thus $\mathsf C$ becomes singular.
138
139(problem-hyper-small-strain)=
140
141## Hyperelasticity at Small Strain
142
143The strong and weak forms given above, in {math:numref}`lin-elas` and {math:numref}`lin-elas-weak`, are valid for Neo-Hookean hyperelasticity at small strain.
144However, the strain energy density differs and is given by
145
146$$
147\bm{\Phi} = \lambda (1 + \operatorname{trace} \bm{\epsilon}) (\log(1 + \operatorname{trace} \bm\epsilon) - 1) + \mu \bm{\epsilon} : \bm{\epsilon} .
148$$
149
150As above, we have the corresponding constitutive law given by
151
152$$
153\bm{\sigma} = \lambda \log(1 + \operatorname{trace} \bm\epsilon) \bm{I}_3 + 2\mu \bm{\epsilon}
154$$ (eq-neo-hookean-small-strain)
155
156where $\bm{\epsilon}$ is defined as in {math:numref}`small-strain`.
157
158### Newton linearization
159
160Due to nonlinearity in the constitutive law, we require a Newton linearization of {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-small-strain`.
161To derive the Newton linearization, we begin by expressing the derivative,
162
163$$
164\diff \bm{\sigma} = \dfrac{\partial \bm{\sigma}}{\partial \bm{\epsilon}} \tcolon \diff \bm{\epsilon}
165$$
166
167where
168
169$$
170\diff \bm{\epsilon} = \dfrac{1}{2}\left( \nabla \diff \bm{u} + \nabla \diff \bm{u}^T \right)
171$$
172
173and
174
175$$
176\diff \nabla \bm{u} = \nabla \diff \bm{u} .
177$$
178
179Therefore,
180
181$$
182\diff \bm{\sigma}  = \bar{\lambda} \cdot \operatorname{trace} \diff \bm{\epsilon} \cdot \bm{I}_3 + 2\mu \diff \bm{\epsilon}
183$$ (derss)
184
185where we have introduced the symbol
186
187$$
188\bar{\lambda} = \dfrac{\lambda}{1 + \epsilon_v }
189$$
190
191where volumetric strain is given by $\epsilon_v = \sum_i \epsilon_{ii}$.
192
193Equation {math:numref}`derss` can be written in Voigt matrix notation as follows:
194
195$$
196\begin{pmatrix}
197  \diff \sigma_{11} \\
198  \diff \sigma_{22} \\
199  \diff \sigma_{33} \\
200  \diff \sigma_{23} \\
201  \diff \sigma_{13} \\
202  \diff \sigma_{12}
203\end{pmatrix}  =
204\begin{pmatrix}
205  2 \mu +\bar{\lambda} & \bar{\lambda} & \bar{\lambda} & & & \\
206  \bar{\lambda} & 2 \mu +\bar{\lambda} & \bar{\lambda} & & & \\
207  \bar{\lambda} & \bar{\lambda} & 2 \mu +\bar{\lambda} & & & \\
208  & & & \mu & & \\
209  & & & & \mu & \\
210  & & & & & \mu \\
211\end{pmatrix}
212\begin{pmatrix}
213  \diff \epsilon_{11} \\
214  \diff \epsilon_{22} \\
215  \diff \epsilon_{33} \\
216  2 \diff \epsilon_{23} \\
217  2 \diff \epsilon_{13} \\
218  2 \diff \epsilon_{12}
219\end{pmatrix}.
220$$ (mdss)
221
222(problem-hyperelasticity-finite-strain)=
223
224## Hyperelasticity at Finite Strain
225
226In the *total Lagrangian* approach for the Neo-Hookean hyperelasticity problem, the discrete equations are formulated with respect to the initial configuration.
227In this formulation, we solve for displacement $\bm u(\bm X)$ in the reference frame $\bm X$.
228The notation for elasticity at finite strain is inspired by {cite}`holzapfel2000nonlinear` to distinguish between the current and initial configurations.
229As explained in the {ref}`common-notation` section, we denote by capital letters the reference frame and by small letters the current one.
230
231The strong form of the static balance of linear-momentum at *finite strain* (total Lagrangian) is given by:
232
233$$
234- \nabla_X \cdot \bm{P} - \rho_0 \bm{g} = \bm{0}
235$$ (sblFinS)
236
237where the $_X$ in $\nabla_X$ indicates that the gradient is calculated with respect to the initial configuration in the finite strain regime.
238$\bm{P}$ and $\bm{g}$ are the *first Piola-Kirchhoff stress* tensor and the prescribed forcing function, respectively.
239$\rho_0$ is known as the *initial* mass density.
240The tensor $\bm P$ is not symmetric, living in the current configuration on the left and the initial configuration on the right.
241
242$\bm{P}$ can be decomposed as
243
244$$
245\bm{P} = \bm{F} \, \bm{S},
246$$ (1st2nd)
247
248where $\bm S$ is the *second Piola-Kirchhoff stress* tensor, a symmetric tensor defined entirely in the initial configuration, and $\bm{F} = \bm I_3 + \nabla_X \bm u$ is the deformation gradient.
249Different constitutive models can define $\bm S$.
250
251### Constitutive modeling
252
253For the constitutive modeling of hyperelasticity at finite strain, we begin by defining two symmetric tensors in the initial configuration, the right Cauchy-Green tensor
254
255$$
256\bm C = \bm F^T \bm F
257$$
258
259and the Green-Lagrange strain tensor
260
261$$
262\bm E = \frac 1 2 (\bm C - \bm I_3) = \frac 1 2 \Big( \nabla_X \bm u + (\nabla_X \bm u)^T + (\nabla_X \bm u)^T \nabla_X \bm u \Big),
263$$ (eq-green-lagrange-strain)
264
265the latter of which converges to the linear strain tensor $\bm \epsilon$ in the small-deformation limit.
266The constitutive models considered, appropriate for large deformations, express $\bm S$ as a function of $\bm E$, similar to the linear case, shown in equation  {math:numref}`linear-stress-strain`, which  expresses the relationship between $\bm\sigma$ and $\bm\epsilon$.
267
268Recall that the strain energy density functional can only depend upon invariants.
269We will assume without loss of generality that $\bm E$ is diagonal and take its set of eigenvalues as the invariants.
270It is clear that there can be only three invariants, and there are many alternate choices, such as $\operatorname{trace}(\bm E), \operatorname{trace}(\bm E^2), \lvert \bm E \rvert$, and combinations thereof.
271It is common in the literature for invariants to be taken from $\bm C = \bm I_3 + 2 \bm E$ instead of $\bm E$.
272
273For example, if we take the compressible Neo-Hookean model,
274
275$$
276\begin{aligned}
277\Phi(\bm E) &= \frac{\lambda}{2}(\log J)^2 - \mu \log J + \frac \mu 2 (\operatorname{trace} \bm C - 3) \\
278  &= \frac{\lambda}{2}(\log J)^2 - \mu \log J + \mu \operatorname{trace} \bm E,
279\end{aligned}
280$$ (neo-hookean-energy)
281
282where $J = \lvert \bm F \rvert = \sqrt{\lvert \bm C \rvert}$ is the determinant of deformation (i.e., volume change) and $\lambda$ and $\mu$ are the Lamé parameters in the infinitesimal strain limit.
283
284To evaluate {math:numref}`strain-energy-grad`, we make use of
285
286$$
287\frac{\partial J}{\partial \bm E} = \frac{\partial \sqrt{\lvert \bm C \rvert}}{\partial \bm E} = \lvert \bm C \rvert^{-1/2} \lvert \bm C \rvert \bm C^{-1} = J \bm C^{-1},
288$$
289
290where the factor of $\frac 1 2$ has been absorbed due to $\bm C = \bm I_3 + 2 \bm E.$
291Carrying through the differentiation {math:numref}`strain-energy-grad` for the model {math:numref}`neo-hookean-energy`, we arrive at
292
293$$
294\bm S = \lambda \log J \bm C^{-1} + \mu (\bm I_3 - \bm C^{-1}).
295$$ (neo-hookean-stress)
296
297:::{tip}
298An equivalent form of {math:numref}`neo-hookean-stress` is
299
300$$
301\bm S = \lambda \log J \bm C^{-1} + 2 \mu \bm C^{-1} \bm E,
302$$ (neo-hookean-stress-stable)
303
304which is more numerically stable for small $\bm E$, and thus preferred for computation.
305Note that the product $\bm C^{-1} \bm E$ is also symmetric, and that $\bm E$ should be computed using {math:numref}`eq-green-lagrange-strain`.
306
307Similarly, it is preferable to compute $\log J$ using `log1p`, especially in case of nearly incompressible materials.
308To sketch this idea, suppose we have the $2\times 2$ non-symmetric matrix $\bm{F} = \left( \begin{smallmatrix} 1 + u_{0,0} & u_{0,1} \\ u_{1,0} & 1 + u_{1,1} \end{smallmatrix} \right)$.
309Then we compute
310
311$$
312\log J = \mathtt{log1p}(u_{0,0} + u_{1,1} + u_{0,0} u_{1,1} - u_{0,1} u_{1,0}),
313$$ (log1p)
314
315which gives accurate results even in the limit when the entries $u_{i,j}$ are very small.
316For example, if $u_{i,j} \sim 10^{-8}$, then naive computation of $\bm I_3 - \bm C^{-1}$ and $\log J$ will have a relative accuracy of order $10^{-8}$ in double precision and no correct digits in single precision.
317When using the stable choices above, these quantities retain full $\varepsilon_{\text{machine}}$ relative accuracy.
318:::
319
320:::{dropdown} Mooney-Rivlin model
321While the Neo-Hookean model depends on just two scalar invariants, $\mathbb I_1 = \trace \bm C = 3 + 2\trace \bm E$ and $J$, Mooney-Rivlin models depend on the additional invariant, $\mathbb I_2 = \frac 1 2 (\mathbb I_1^2 - \bm C \tcolon \bm C)$.
322A coupled Mooney-Rivlin strain energy density (cf. Neo-Hookean {math:numref}`neo-hookean-energy`) is {cite}`holzapfel2000nonlinear`
323
324$$
325\Phi(\mathbb{I_1}, \mathbb{I_2}, J) = \frac{\lambda}{2}(\log J)^2 - (\mu_1 + 2\mu_2) \log J + \frac{\mu_1}{2}(\mathbb{I_1} - 3) + \frac{\mu_2}{2}(\mathbb{I_2} - 3).
326$$ (mooney-rivlin-energy_coupled)
327
328We differentiate $\Phi$ as in the Neo-Hookean case {math:numref}`neo-hookean-stress` to yield the second Piola-Kirchoff tensor,
329
330$$
331\begin{aligned}
332\bm S &=  \lambda \log J \bm{C}^{-1} - (\mu_1 + 2\mu_2) \bm{C}^{-1} + \mu_1\bm I_3 + \mu_2(\mathbb{I_1} \bm I_3 - \bm C) \\
333&= (\lambda \log J - \mu_1 - 2\mu_2) \bm C^{-1} + (\mu_1 + \mu_2 \mathbb I_1) \bm I_3 - \mu_2 \bm C,
334\end{aligned}
335$$ (mooney-rivlin-stress_coupled)
336
337where we have used
338
339$$
340\begin{aligned}
341\frac{\partial \mathbb{I_1}}{\partial \bm E} &= 2 \bm I_3, & \frac{\partial \mathbb{I_2}}{\partial \bm E} &= 2 \mathbb I_1 \bm I_3 - 2 \bm C, & \frac{\partial \log J}{\partial \bm E} &= \bm{C}^{-1}.
342\end{aligned}
343$$ (None)
344
345This is a common model for vulcanized rubber, with a shear modulus (defined for the small-strain limit) of $\mu_1 + \mu_2$ that should be significantly smaller than the first Lamé parameter $\lambda$.
346:::
347
348:::{dropdown} Mooney-Rivlin strain energy comparison
349We apply traction to a block and plot integrated strain energy $\Phi$ as a function of the loading paramater.
350
351```{altair-plot}
352:hide-code:
353
354import altair as alt
355import pandas as pd
356nh = pd.read_csv("source/examples/solids/output/NH-strain.csv")
357nh["model"] = "Neo-Hookean"
358nh["parameters"] = "E=2.8, nu=0.4"
359
360mr = pd.read_csv("source/examples/solids/output/MR-strain.csv")
361mr["model"] = "Mooney-Rivlin; Neo-Hookean equivalent"
362mr["parameters"] = "mu_1=1, mu_2=0, nu=.4"
363
364mr1 = pd.read_csv("source/examples/solids/output/MR-strain1.csv")
365mr1["model"] = "Mooney-Rivlin"
366mr1["parameters"] = "mu_1=0.5, mu_2=0.5, nu=.4"
367
368df = pd.concat([nh, mr, mr1])
369highlight = alt.selection_single(
370   on = "mouseover",
371   nearest = True,
372   fields=["model", "parameters"],
373)
374base = alt.Chart(df).encode(
375   alt.X("increment"),
376   alt.Y("energy", scale=alt.Scale(type="sqrt")),
377   alt.Color("model"),
378   alt.Tooltip(("model", "parameters")),
379   opacity=alt.condition(highlight, alt.value(1), alt.value(.5)),
380   size=alt.condition(highlight, alt.value(2), alt.value(1)),
381)
382base.mark_point().add_selection(highlight) + base.mark_line()
383```
384:::
385
386:::{note}
387One can linearize {math:numref}`neo-hookean-stress` around $\bm E = 0$, for which $\bm C = \bm I_3 + 2 \bm E \to \bm I_3$ and $J \to 1 + \operatorname{trace} \bm E$, therefore {math:numref}`neo-hookean-stress` reduces to
388
389$$
390\bm S = \lambda (\trace \bm E) \bm I_3 + 2 \mu \bm E,
391$$ (eq-st-venant-kirchoff)
392
393which is the St. Venant-Kirchoff model (constitutive linearization without geometric linearization; see {math:numref}`hyperelastic-cd`).
394
395This model can be used for geometrically nonlinear mechanics (e.g., snap-through of thin structures), but is inappropriate for large strain.
396
397Alternatively, one can drop geometric nonlinearities, $\bm E \to \bm \epsilon$ and $\bm C \to \bm I_3$, while retaining the nonlinear dependence on $J \to 1 + \operatorname{trace} \bm \epsilon$, thereby yielding {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-small-strain` (see {math:numref}`hyperelastic-cd`).
398:::
399
400### Weak form
401
402We multiply {math:numref}`sblFinS` by a test function $\bm v$ and integrate by parts to obtain the weak form for finite-strain hyperelasticity:
403find $\bm u \in \mathcal V \subset H^1(\Omega_0)$ such that
404
405$$
406\int_{\Omega_0}{\nabla_X \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{P}} \, dV
407 - \int_{\Omega_0}{\bm{v} \cdot \rho_0 \bm{g}} \, dV
408 - \int_{\partial \Omega_0}{\bm{v} \cdot (\bm{P} \cdot \hat{\bm{N}})} \, dS
409 = 0, \quad \forall \bm v \in \mathcal V,
410$$ (hyperelastic-weak-form-initial)
411
412where $\bm{P} \cdot \hat{\bm{N}}|_{\partial\Omega}$ is replaced by any prescribed force/traction boundary condition written in terms of the initial configuration.
413This equation contains material/constitutive nonlinearities in defining $\bm S(\bm E)$, as well as geometric nonlinearities through $\bm P = \bm F\, \bm S$, $\bm E(\bm F)$, and the body force $\bm g$, which must be pulled back from the current configuration to the initial configuration.
414Discretization of {math:numref}`hyperelastic-weak-form-initial` produces a finite-dimensional system of nonlinear algebraic equations, which we solve using Newton-Raphson methods.
415One attractive feature of Galerkin discretization is that we can arrive at the same linear system by discretizing the Newton linearization of the continuous form; that is, discretization and differentiation (Newton linearization) commute.
416
417### Newton linearization
418
419To derive a Newton linearization of {math:numref}`hyperelastic-weak-form-initial`, we begin by expressing the derivative of {math:numref}`1st2nd` in incremental form,
420
421$$
422\diff \bm P = \frac{\partial \bm P}{\partial \bm F} \!:\! \diff \bm F = \diff \bm F\, \bm S + \bm F \underbrace{\frac{\partial \bm S}{\partial \bm E} \!:\! \diff \bm E}_{\diff \bm S}
423$$ (eq-diff-P)
424
425where
426
427$$
428\diff \bm E = \frac{\partial \bm E}{\partial \bm F} \!:\! \diff \bm F = \frac 1 2 \Big( \diff \bm F^T \bm F + \bm F^T \diff \bm F \Big)
429$$
430
431and $\diff\bm F = \nabla_X\diff\bm u$.
432The quantity ${\partial \bm S} / {\partial \bm E}$ is known as the incremental elasticity tensor, and is analogous to the linear elasticity tensor $\mathsf C$ of {math:numref}`linear-elasticity-tensor`.
433We now evaluate $\diff \bm S$ for the Neo-Hookean model {math:numref}`neo-hookean-stress`,
434
435$$
436\diff\bm S = \frac{\partial \bm S}{\partial \bm E} \!:\! \diff \bm E
437= \lambda (\bm C^{-1} \!:\! \diff\bm E) \bm C^{-1}
438  + 2 (\mu - \lambda \log J) \bm C^{-1} \diff\bm E \, \bm C^{-1},
439$$ (eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress)
440
441where we have used
442
443$$
444\diff \bm C^{-1} = \frac{\partial \bm C^{-1}}{\partial \bm E} \!:\! \diff\bm E = -2 \bm C^{-1} \diff \bm E \, \bm C^{-1} .
445$$
446
447:::{note}
448In the small-strain limit, $\bm C \to \bm I_3$ and $\log J \to 0$, thereby reducing {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress` to the St. Venant-Kirchoff model {math:numref}`eq-st-venant-kirchoff`.
449:::
450
451:::{dropdown} Newton linearization of Mooney-Rivlin
452Similar to {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress`, we differentiate {math:numref}`mooney-rivlin-stress_coupled` using variational notation,
453
454$$
455\begin{aligned}
456\diff\bm S &= \lambda (\bm C^{-1} \tcolon \diff\bm E) \bm C^{-1} \\
457&\quad + 2(\mu_1 + 2\mu_2 - \lambda \log J) \bm C^{-1} \diff\bm E \bm C^{-1} \\
458&\quad + 2 \mu_2 \Big[ \trace (\diff\bm E) \bm I_3 - \diff\bm E\Big] .
459\end{aligned}
460$$ (mooney-rivlin-dS-coupled)
461
462Note that this agrees with {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress` if $\mu_1 = \mu, \mu_2 = 0$.
463Moving from Neo-Hookean to Mooney-Rivlin modifies the second term and adds the third.
464:::
465
466:::{dropdown} Cancellation vs symmetry
467Some cancellation is possible (at the expense of symmetry) if we substitute {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress` into {math:numref}`eq-diff-P`,
468
469$$
470\begin{aligned}
471\diff \bm P &= \diff \bm F\, \bm S
472  + \lambda (\bm C^{-1} : \diff \bm E) \bm F^{-T} + 2(\mu - \lambda \log J) \bm F^{-T} \diff\bm E \, \bm C^{-1} \\
473&= \diff \bm F\, \bm S
474  + \lambda (\bm F^{-T} : \diff \bm F) \bm F^{-T} + (\mu - \lambda \log J) \bm F^{-T} (\bm F^T \diff \bm F + \diff \bm F^T \bm F) \bm C^{-1} \\
475&= \diff \bm F\, \bm S
476  + \lambda (\bm F^{-T} : \diff \bm F) \bm F^{-T} + (\mu - \lambda \log J) \Big( \diff \bm F\, \bm C^{-1} + \bm F^{-T} \diff \bm F^T \bm F^{-T} \Big),
477\end{aligned}
478$$ (eq-diff-P-dF)
479
480where we have exploited $\bm F \bm C^{-1} = \bm F^{-T}$ and
481
482$$
483\begin{aligned} \bm C^{-1} \!:\! \diff \bm E = \bm C_{IJ}^{-1} \diff \bm E_{IJ} &= \frac 1 2 \bm F_{Ik}^{-1} \bm F_{Jk}^{-1} (\bm F_{\ell I} \diff \bm F_{\ell J} + \diff \bm F_{\ell I} \bm F_{\ell J}) \\ &= \frac 1 2 \Big( \delta_{\ell k} \bm F_{Jk}^{-1} \diff \bm F_{\ell J} + \delta_{\ell k} \bm F_{Ik}^{-1} \diff \bm F_{\ell I} \Big) \\ &= \bm F_{Ik}^{-1} \diff \bm F_{kI} = \bm F^{-T} \!:\! \diff \bm F. \end{aligned}
484$$
485
486We prefer to compute with {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress` because {math:numref}`eq-diff-P-dF` is more expensive, requiring access to (non-symmetric) $\bm F^{-1}$ in addition to (symmetric) $\bm C^{-1} = \bm F^{-1} \bm F^{-T}$, having fewer symmetries to exploit in contractions, and being less numerically stable.
487:::
488
489:::{dropdown} $\diff\bm S$ in index notation
490It is sometimes useful to express {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress` in index notation,
491
492$$
493\begin{aligned}
494\diff\bm S_{IJ} &= \frac{\partial \bm S_{IJ}}{\partial \bm E_{KL}} \diff \bm E_{KL} \\
495  &= \lambda (\bm C^{-1}_{KL} \diff\bm E_{KL}) \bm C^{-1}_{IJ} + 2 (\mu - \lambda \log J) \bm C^{-1}_{IK} \diff\bm E_{KL} \bm C^{-1}_{LJ} \\
496  &= \underbrace{\Big( \lambda \bm C^{-1}_{IJ} \bm C^{-1}_{KL} + 2 (\mu - \lambda \log J) \bm C^{-1}_{IK} \bm C^{-1}_{JL} \Big)}_{\mathsf C_{IJKL}} \diff \bm E_{KL} \,,
497\end{aligned}
498$$ (eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress-index)
499
500where we have identified the effective elasticity tensor $\mathsf C = \mathsf C_{IJKL}$.
501It is generally not desirable to store $\mathsf C$, but rather to use the earlier expressions so that only $3\times 3$ tensors (most of which are symmetric) must be manipulated.
502That is, given the linearization point $\bm F$ and solution increment $\diff \bm F = \nabla_X (\diff \bm u)$ (which we are solving for in the Newton step), we compute $\diff \bm P$ via
503
5041. recover $\bm C^{-1}$ and $\log J$ (either stored at quadrature points or recomputed),
5052. proceed with $3\times 3$ matrix products as in {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress` or the second line of {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress-index` to compute $\diff \bm S$ while avoiding computation or storage of higher order tensors, and
5063. conclude by {math:numref}`eq-diff-P`, where $\bm S$ is either stored or recomputed from its definition exactly as in the nonlinear residual evaluation.
507:::
508
509Note that the Newton linearization of {math:numref}`hyperelastic-weak-form-initial` may be written as a weak form for linear operators: find $\diff\bm u \in \mathcal V_0$ such that
510
511$$
512\int_{\Omega_0} \nabla_X \bm v \!:\! \diff\bm P dV = \text{rhs}, \quad \forall \bm v \in \mathcal V_0,
513$$
514
515where $\diff \bm P$ is defined by {math:numref}`eq-diff-P` and {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress`, and $\mathcal V_0$ is the homogeneous space corresponding to $\mathcal V$.
516
517:::{note}
518The decision of whether to recompute or store functions of the current state $\bm F$ depends on a roofline analysis {cite}`williams2009roofline,brown2010` of the computation and the cost of the constitutive model.
519For low-order elements where flops tend to be in surplus relative to memory bandwidth, recomputation is likely to be preferable, where as the opposite may be true for high-order elements.
520Similarly, analysis with a simple constitutive model may see better performance while storing little or nothing while an expensive model such as Arruda-Boyce {cite}`arruda1993largestretch`, which contains many special functions, may be faster when using more storage to avoid recomputation.
521In the case where complete linearization is preferred, note the symmetry $\mathsf C_{IJKL} = \mathsf C_{KLIJ}$ evident in {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress-index`, thus $\mathsf C$ can be stored as a symmetric $6\times 6$ matrix, which has 21 unique entries.
522Along with 6 entries for $\bm S$, this totals 27 entries of overhead compared to computing everything from $\bm F$.
523This compares with 13 entries of overhead for direct storage of $\{ \bm S, \bm C^{-1}, \log J \}$, which is sufficient for the Neo-Hookean model to avoid all but matrix products.
524:::
525
526(problem-hyperelasticity-finite-strain-current-configuration)=
527
528## Hyperelasticity in current configuration
529
530In the preceeding discussion, all equations have been formulated in the initial configuration.
531This may feel convenient in that the computational domain is clearly independent of the solution, but there are some advantages to defining the equations in the current configuration.
532
5331. Body forces (like gravity), traction, and contact are more easily defined in the current configuration.
5342. Mesh quality in the initial configuration can be very bad for large deformation.
5353. The required storage and numerical representation can be smaller in the current configuration.
536
537Most of the benefit in case 3 can be attained solely by moving the Jacobian representation to the current configuration {cite}`davydov2020matrix`, though residual evaluation may also be slightly faster in current configuration.
538There are multiple commuting paths from the nonlinear weak form in initial configuration {math:numref}`hyperelastic-weak-form-initial` to the Jacobian weak form in current configuration {math:numref}`jacobian-weak-form-current`.
539One may push forward to the current configuration and then linearize or linearize in initial configuration and then push forward, as summarized below.
540
541$$
542\begin{CD}
543  {\overbrace{\nabla_X \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{FS}}^{\text{Initial Residual}}}
544  @>{\text{push forward}}>{}>
545  {\overbrace{\nabla_x \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{\tau}}^{\text{Current Residual}}} \\
546  @V{\text{linearize}}V{\begin{smallmatrix} \diff\bm F = \nabla_X\diff\bm u \\ \diff\bm S(\diff\bm E) \end{smallmatrix}}V
547  @V{\begin{smallmatrix} \diff\nabla_x\bm v = -\nabla_x\bm v \nabla_x \diff\bm u \\ \diff\bm\tau(\diff\bm\epsilon) \end{smallmatrix}}V{\text{linearize}}V \\
548  {\underbrace{\nabla_X\bm{v}\tcolon \Big(\diff\bm{F}\bm{S} + \bm{F}\diff\bm{S}\Big)}_\text{Initial Jacobian}}
549  @>{\text{push forward}}>{}>
550  {\underbrace{\nabla_x\bm{v}\tcolon \Big(\diff\bm{\tau} -\bm{\tau}(\nabla_x \diff\bm{u})^T \Big)}_\text{Current Jacobian}}
551\end{CD}
552$$ (initial-current-linearize)
553
554We will follow both paths for consistency and because both intermediate representations may be useful for implementation.
555
556### Push forward, then linearize
557
558The first term of {math:numref}`hyperelastic-weak-form-initial` can be rewritten in terms of the symmetric Kirchhoff stress tensor
559$\bm{\tau}=J\bm{\sigma}=\bm{P}\bm{F}^T = \bm F \bm S \bm F^T$ as
560
561$$
562\nabla_X \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{P} = \nabla_X \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{\tau}\bm{F}^{-T} = \nabla_X \bm{v}\bm{F}^{-1} \tcolon \bm{\tau} = \nabla_x \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{\tau}
563$$
564
565therefore, the weak form in terms of $\bm{\tau}$ and $\nabla_x$ with integral over $\Omega_0$ is
566
567$$
568\int_{\Omega_0}{\nabla_x \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{\tau}} \, dV
569 - \int_{\Omega_0}{\bm{v} \cdot \rho_0 \bm{g}} \, dV
570 - \int_{\partial \Omega_0}{\bm{v}\cdot(\bm{P}\cdot\hat{\bm{N}})} \, dS
571 = 0, \quad \forall \bm v \in \mathcal V.
572$$ (hyperelastic-weak-form-current)
573
574#### Linearize in current configuration
575
576To derive a Newton linearization of {math:numref}`hyperelastic-weak-form-current`, first we define
577
578$$
579\nabla_x \diff \bm{u} = \nabla_X \diff \bm{u} \  \bm{F}^{-1} = \diff \bm{F} \bm{F}^{-1}
580$$ (nabla_xdu)
581
582and $\bm{\tau}$ for Neo-Hookean materials as the push forward of {math:numref}`neo-hookean-stress`
583
584$$
585\bm{\tau} = \bm{F}\bm{S}\bm{F}^T = \mu (\bm{b} - \bm I_3) + \lambda \log J \bm{I}_3,
586$$ (tau-neo-hookean)
587
588where $\bm{b} = \bm{F} \bm{F}^T$, is the left Cauchy-Green tensor.
589Then by expanding the directional derivative of $\nabla_x \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{\tau}$, we arrive at
590
591$$
592\diff \ (\nabla_x \bm{v} \tcolon \bm{\tau}) = \diff \ (\nabla_x \bm{v})\tcolon \bm{\tau} + \nabla_x \bm{v} \tcolon \diff \bm{\tau} .
593$$ (hyperelastic-linearization-current1)
594
595The first term of {math:numref}`hyperelastic-linearization-current1` can be written as
596
597$$
598\begin{aligned} \diff \ (\nabla_x \bm{v})\tcolon \bm{\tau} &= \diff \ (\nabla_X \bm{v} \bm{F}^{-1})\tcolon \bm{\tau} = \Big(\underbrace{\nabla_X (\diff \bm{v})}_{0}\bm{F}^{-1} +  \nabla_X \bm{v}\diff \bm{F}^{-1}\Big)\tcolon \bm{\tau}\\   &= \Big(-\nabla_X \bm{v} \bm{F}^{-1}\diff\bm{F}\bm{F}^{-1}\Big)\tcolon \bm{\tau}=\Big(-\nabla_x \bm{v} \diff\bm{F}\bm{F}^{-1}\Big)\tcolon \bm{\tau}\\   &= \Big(-\nabla_x \bm{v} \nabla_x \diff\bm{u} \Big)\tcolon \bm{\tau}= -\nabla_x \bm{v}\tcolon\bm{\tau}(\nabla_x \diff\bm{u})^T \,, \end{aligned}
599$$
600
601where we have used $\diff \bm{F}^{-1}=-\bm{F}^{-1} \diff \bm{F} \bm{F}^{-1}$ and {math:numref}`nabla_xdu`.
602Using this and {math:numref}`hyperelastic-linearization-current1` in {math:numref}`hyperelastic-weak-form-current` yields the weak form in the current configuration
603
604$$
605\int_{\Omega_0} \nabla_x \bm v \tcolon \Big(\diff\bm\tau - \bm\tau (\nabla_x \diff\bm u)^T \Big) = \text{rhs}.
606$$ (jacobian-weak-form-current)
607
608In the following, we will sometimes make use of the incremental strain tensor in the current configuration,
609
610$$
611\diff\bm\epsilon \equiv \frac{1}{2}\Big(\nabla_x \diff\bm{u} + (\nabla_x \diff\bm{u})^T   \Big) .
612$$
613
614:::{dropdown} Deriving $\diff\bm\tau$ for Neo-Hookean material
615To derive a useful expression of $\diff\bm\tau$ for Neo-Hookean materials, we will use the representations
616
617$$
618\begin{aligned}
619\diff \bm{b} &= \diff \bm{F} \bm{F}^T + \bm{F} \diff \bm{F}^T \\
620&= \nabla_x \diff \bm{u} \ \bm{b} + \bm{b} \ (\nabla_x \diff \bm{u})^T \\
621&= (\nabla_x \diff\bm u)(\bm b - \bm I_3) + (\bm b - \bm I_3) (\nabla_x \diff\bm u)^T + 2 \diff\bm\epsilon
622\end{aligned}
623$$
624
625and
626
627$$
628\begin{aligned} \diff\ (\log J) &= \frac{\partial \log J}{\partial \bm{b}}\tcolon \diff \bm{b} = \frac{\partial J}{J\partial \bm{b}}\tcolon \diff \bm{b}=\frac{1}{2}\bm{b}^{-1}\tcolon \diff \bm{b} \\ &= \frac 1 2 \bm b^{-1} \tcolon \Big(\nabla_x \diff\bm u \ \bm b + \bm b (\nabla_x \diff\bm u)^T \Big) \\ &= \trace (\nabla_x \diff\bm u) \\ &= \trace \diff\bm\epsilon . \end{aligned}
629$$
630
631Substituting into {math:numref}`tau-neo-hookean` gives
632
633$$
634\begin{aligned}
635\diff \bm{\tau} &= \mu \diff \bm{b} + \lambda \trace (\diff\bm\epsilon) \bm I_3 \\
636&= \underbrace{2 \mu \diff\bm\epsilon + \lambda \trace (\diff\bm\epsilon) \bm I_3 - 2\lambda \log J \diff\bm\epsilon}_{\bm F \diff\bm S \bm F^T} \\
637&\quad + (\nabla_x \diff\bm u)\underbrace{\Big( \mu (\bm b - \bm I_3) + \lambda \log J \bm I_3 \Big)}_{\bm\tau} \\
638&\quad + \underbrace{\Big( \mu (\bm b - \bm I_3) + \lambda \log J \bm I_3 \Big)}_{\bm\tau}  (\nabla_x \diff\bm u)^T ,
639\end{aligned}
640$$ (dtau-neo-hookean)
641
642where the final expression has been identified according to
643
644$$
645\diff\bm\tau = \diff\ (\bm F \bm S \bm F^T) = (\nabla_x \diff\bm u) \bm\tau + \bm F \diff\bm S \bm F^T + \bm\tau(\nabla_x \diff\bm u)^T.
646$$
647:::
648
649Collecting terms, we may thus opt to use either of the two forms
650
651$$
652\begin{aligned}
653\diff \bm{\tau} -\bm{\tau}(\nabla_x \diff\bm{u})^T &= (\nabla_x \diff\bm u)\bm\tau + \bm F \diff\bm S \bm F^T \\
654&= (\nabla_x \diff\bm u)\bm\tau + \lambda \trace(\diff\bm\epsilon) \bm I_3 + 2(\mu - \lambda \log J) \diff\bm\epsilon,
655\end{aligned}
656$$ (cur_simp_Jac)
657
658with the last line showing the especially compact representation available for Neo-Hookean materials.
659
660### Linearize, then push forward
661
662We can move the derivatives to the current configuration via
663
664$$
665\nabla_X \bm v \!:\! \diff\bm P = (\nabla_X \bm v) \bm F^{-1} \!:\! \diff \bm P \bm F^T = \nabla_x \bm v \!:\! \diff\bm P \bm F^T
666$$
667
668and expand
669
670$$
671\begin{aligned}
672\diff\bm P \bm F^T &= \diff\bm F \bm S \bm F^T + \bm F \diff\bm S \bm F^T \\
673&= \underbrace{\diff\bm F \bm F^{-1}}_{\nabla_x \diff\bm u} \underbrace{\bm F \bm S \bm F^T}_{\bm\tau} + \bm F \diff\bm S \bm F^T .
674\end{aligned}
675$$
676
677:::{dropdown} Representation of $\bm F \diff\bm S \bm F^T$ for Neo-Hookean materials
678Now we push {math:numref}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress` forward via
679
680$$
681\begin{aligned}
682\bm F \diff\bm S \bm F^T &= \lambda (\bm C^{-1} \!:\! \diff\bm E) \bm F \bm C^{-1} \bm F^T
683  + 2 (\mu - \lambda \log J) \bm F \bm C^{-1} \diff\bm E \, \bm C^{-1} \bm F^T \\
684    &= \lambda (\bm C^{-1} \!:\! \diff\bm E) \bm I_3 + 2 (\mu - \lambda \log J) \bm F^{-T} \diff\bm E \, \bm F^{-1} \\
685    &= \lambda \operatorname{trace}(\nabla_x \diff\bm u) \bm I_3 + 2 (\mu - \lambda \log J) \diff\bm \epsilon
686\end{aligned}
687$$
688
689where we have used
690
691$$
692\begin{aligned}
693\bm C^{-1} \!:\! \diff\bm E &= \bm F^{-1} \bm F^{-T} \!:\! \bm F^T \diff\bm F \\
694&= \operatorname{trace}(\bm F^{-1} \bm F^{-T} \bm F^T \diff \bm F) \\
695&= \operatorname{trace}(\bm F^{-1} \diff\bm F) \\
696&= \operatorname{trace}(\diff \bm F \bm F^{-1}) \\
697&= \operatorname{trace}(\nabla_x \diff\bm u)
698\end{aligned}
699$$
700
701and
702
703$$
704\begin{aligned}
705\bm F^{-T} \diff\bm E \, \bm F^{-1} &= \frac 1 2 \bm F^{-T} (\bm F^T \diff\bm F + \diff\bm F^T \bm F) \bm F^{-1} \\
706&= \frac 1 2 (\diff \bm F \bm F^{-1} + \bm F^{-T} \diff\bm F^T) \\
707&= \frac 1 2 \Big(\nabla_x \diff\bm u + (\nabla_x\diff\bm u)^T \Big) \equiv \diff\bm\epsilon.
708\end{aligned}
709$$
710:::
711
712Collecting terms, the weak form of the Newton linearization for Neo-Hookean materials in the current configuration is
713
714$$
715\int_{\Omega_0} \nabla_x \bm v \!:\! \Big( (\nabla_x \diff\bm u) \bm\tau + \lambda \operatorname{trace}(\diff\bm\epsilon)\bm I_3 + 2(\mu - \lambda\log J)\diff \bm\epsilon \Big) dV = \text{rhs},
716$$ (jacobian-weak-form-current2)
717
718which equivalent to Algorithm 2 of {cite}`davydov2020matrix` and requires only derivatives with respect to the current configuration. Note that {math:numref}`cur_simp_Jac` and {math:numref}`jacobian-weak-form-current2` have recovered the same representation
719using different algebraic manipulations.
720
721:::{tip}
722We define a second order *Green-Euler* strain tensor (cf. Green-Lagrange strain {math:numref}`eq-green-lagrange-strain`) as
723
724$$
725\bm e = \frac 1 2 \Big(\bm{b} - \bm{I}_3 \Big) = \frac 1 2 \Big( \nabla_X \bm{u} + (\nabla_X \bm{u})^T + \nabla_X \bm{u} \, (\nabla_X \bm{u})^T \Big).
726$$ (green-euler-strain)
727
728Then, the Kirchhoff stress tensor {math:numref}`tau-neo-hookean` can be written as
729
730$$
731\bm \tau = \lambda \log J \bm I_{3} + 2\mu \bm e,
732$$ (tau-neo-hookean-stable)
733
734which is more numerically stable for small strain, and thus preferred for computation. Note that the $\log J$ is computed via `log1p` {math:numref}`log1p`, as we discussed in the previous tip.
735:::
736
737### Jacobian representation
738
739We have implemented four storage variants for the Jacobian in our finite strain hyperelasticity. In each case, some variables are computed during residual evaluation and used during Jacobian application.
740
741:::{list-table} Four algorithms for Jacobian action in finite strain hyperelasticity problem
742:header-rows: 1
743:widths: auto
744
745* - Option `-problem`
746  - Static storage
747  - Computed storage
748  - \# scalars
749  - Equations
750
751
752* - `FSInitial-NH1`
753  - $\nabla_{X} \hat X, \operatorname{det}\nabla_{\hat X} X$
754  - $\nabla_X \bm u$
755  - 19
756  - {eq}`eq-diff-P` {eq}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress`
757
758* - `FSInitial-NH2`
759  - $\nabla_{X} \hat X, \operatorname{det}\nabla_{\hat X} X$
760  - $\nabla_X \bm u, \bm C^{-1}, \lambda \log J$
761  - 26
762  - {eq}`eq-diff-P` {eq}`eq-neo-hookean-incremental-stress`
763
764* - `FSCurrent-NH1`
765  - $\nabla_{X} \hat X, \operatorname{det}\nabla_{\hat X} X$
766  - $\nabla_X \bm u$
767  - 19
768  - {eq}`jacobian-weak-form-current` {eq}`nabla_xdu`
769
770* - `FSCurrent-NH2`
771  - $\operatorname{det}\nabla_{\hat X} X$
772  - $\nabla_x \hat X, \bm \tau, \lambda \log J$
773  - 17
774  - {eq}`jacobian-weak-form-current` {eq}`jacobian-weak-form-current2`
775:::
776