In
continuum mechanics, 'finite deformation
tensors' are used when the
deformation of a body is sufficiently large to invalidate the assumptions inherent in
small strain theory. This is commonly the case with
elastomers, plastically-deforming materials and other
fluids and biological
soft tissue.
Deformation gradient tensor
The position (vector) of a particle in the initial, undeformed state of a body is denoted
relative to some coordinate basis. The position of the same particle in the deformed state is denoted
. If
is a line segment joining two nearby particles in the undeformed state and
is the line segment joining the same two particles in the defomed state, the
linear transformation between the two line segments is given by
:
The quantity
is called the 'deformation gradient' and is given by:
:
or, in
index notation:
:
It is assumed that
is a
differentiable function of
and time ''t'', i.e, that
cracks and voids do not open or close during the deformation.
is a
second-order tensor and contains information about both the stretch and rotation of the body.
Note: The notation and terminology used here was introduced in the "Non-Linear Field Theories of Mechanics” by C.Truesdell and myself (Walter Noll), published in 1965. I invented much of this notation and terminology, but I now realize that some of it is misleading and should be changed. For example “Deformation Gradient” should be replaced by “Transplacement Gradient”. A modern, frame-free and coordinate-free analysis of the mathematical concept of deformation can be found in the first four parts of my "Five Contributions to Natural Philosophy", published in 2005 and available on my website www.math.cmu.edu/~wn0g/noll
Polar Decomposition
The deformation gradient
can be decomposed using the
polar decomposition theorem into a product of two second-order tensors:
:
where
is an
proper orthogonal tensor, and
and
are both
positive definite symmetric tensors of second order.
The tensor
represents a rotation. The tensors
and
represent stretches.
is called the 'right stretch tensor'.
is called the 'left stretch tensor'.
The
spectral decompositions of
and
are
:
and
:
where
are the 'principal stretches', and
,
are the 'directions' of the principal stretches ('principal directions').
The principal directions are related by
:
.
Rotation-Independent Deformation Measures
Since a pure rotation should not induce any stresses
in a deformable body, it is often convenient to use
rotation-independent measures of the deformation in
continuum mechanics.
As a rotation followed its inverse rotation leads to no change (
) we can exclude the rotation by multiplying
by its
transpose.
The Right Cauchy-Green deformation tensor
The right Cauchy-Green deformation tensor
(named after
Augustin Louis Cauchy and
George Green) is defined as::
:
or
:
The
spectral decomposition of
is
:
Physically, the Cauchy-Green tensor gives us the square of local change in distances due to deformation.
The Left Cauchy-Green deformation tensor
Reversing the order of multiplication in the formula for the Finger tensor leads to the 'left Cauchy-Green deformation tensor' which is defined as:
:
In index notation:
:
The
spectral decomposition of
is
:
The Finger deformation tensor
The inverse of the left Cauchy-Green tensor is often called the 'Finger tensor'. This tensor is named after
Josef Finger (1894).
Examples
Uniaxial extension of an incompressible material
This the case where a specimen is stretched in 1-direction with a
stetch ratio of
. If the volume remains constant, the contraction in the other two directions is such that
or
. Then:
:
:
===
Simple shear===
Rigid body rotation
See also
★
Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor, the stress tensor for finite deformations.
Reference
★ C. W. Macosko 'Rheology: principles, measurement and applications', VCH Publishers, 1994, ISBN 1-56081-579-5