Elasticity Tensor

The elasticity tensor is a fourth-rank tensor describing the stress-strain relation in a linear elastic material.

Other names are elastic modulus tensor and stiffness tensor. Common symbols include and .

The defining equation can be written as

where and are the components of the Cauchy stress tensor and infinitesimal strain tensor, and are the components of the elasticity tensor. Summation over repeated indices is implied. This relationship can be interpreted as a generalization of Hooke's law to a 3D continuum.

A general fourth-rank tensor in 3D has 34 = 81 independent components , but the elasticity tensor has at most 21 independent components. This fact follows from the symmetry of the stress and strain tensors, together with the requirement that the stress derives from an elastic energy potential. For isotropic materials, the elasticity tensor has just two independent components, which can be chosen to be the bulk modulus and shear modulus.

Definition

The most general linear relation between two second-rank tensors Elasticity Tensor  is

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor  are the components of a fourth-rank tensor Elasticity Tensor . The elasticity tensor is defined as Elasticity Tensor  for the case where Elasticity Tensor  and Elasticity Tensor  are the stress and strain tensors, respectively.

The compliance tensor Elasticity Tensor  is defined from the inverse stress-strain relation:

    Elasticity Tensor 

The two are related by

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor  is the Kronecker delta.

Unless otherwise noted, this article assumes Elasticity Tensor  is defined from the stress-strain relation of a linear elastic material, in the limit of small strain.

Special cases

Isotropic

For an isotropic material, Elasticity Tensor  simplifies to

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor  and Elasticity Tensor  are scalar functions of the material coordinates Elasticity Tensor , and Elasticity Tensor  is the metric tensor in the reference frame of the material. In an orthonormal Cartesian coordinate basis, there is no distinction between upper and lower indices, and the metric tensor can be replaced with the Kronecker delta:

    Elasticity Tensor 

Substituting the first equation into the stress-strain relation and summing over repeated indices gives

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor  is the trace of Elasticity Tensor . In this form, Elasticity Tensor  and Elasticity Tensor  can be identified with the first and second Lamé parameters. An equivalent expression is

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor  is the bulk modulus, and

    Elasticity Tensor 

are the components of the shear tensor Elasticity Tensor .

Cubic crystals

The elasticity tensor of a cubic crystal has components

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor , Elasticity Tensor , and Elasticity Tensor  are unit vectors corresponding to the three mutually perpendicular axes of the crystal unit cell. The coefficients Elasticity Tensor , Elasticity Tensor , and Elasticity Tensor  are scalars; because they are coordinate-independent, they are intrinsic material constants. Thus, a crystal with cubic symmetry is described by three independent elastic constants.

In an orthonormal Cartesian coordinate basis, there is no distinction between upper and lower indices, and Elasticity Tensor  is the Kronecker delta, so the expression simplifies to

    Elasticity Tensor 

Other crystal classes

There are similar expressions for the components of Elasticity Tensor  in other crystal symmetry classes. The number of independent elastic constants for several of these is given in table 1.

Table 1: Number of independent elastic constants for various crystal symmetry classes.
Crystal family Point group Independent components
Triclinic 21
Monoclinic 13
Orthorhombic 9
Tetragonal C4, S4, C4h 7
Tetragonal C4v, D2d, D4, D4h 6
Rhombohedral C3, S6 7
Rhombohedral C3v, D6, D3d 6
Hexagonal 5
Cubic 3

Properties

Symmetries

The elasticity tensor has several symmetries that follow directly from its defining equation Elasticity Tensor . The symmetry of the stress and strain tensors implies that

    Elasticity Tensor 

Usually, one also assumes that the stress derives from an elastic energy potential Elasticity Tensor :

    Elasticity Tensor 

which implies

    Elasticity Tensor 

Hence, Elasticity Tensor  must be symmetric under interchange of the first and second pairs of indices:

    Elasticity Tensor 

The symmetries listed above reduce the number of independent components from 81 to 21. If a material has additional symmetries, then this number is further reduced.

Transformations

Under rotation, the components Elasticity Tensor  transform as

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor  are the covariant components in the rotated basis, and Elasticity Tensor  are the elements of the corresponding rotation matrix. A similar transformation rule holds for other linear transformations.

Invariants

The components of Elasticity Tensor  generally acquire different values under a change of basis. Nevertheless, for certain types of transformations, there are specific combinations of components, called invariants, that remain unchanged. Invariants are defined with respect to a given set of transformations, formally known as a group operation. For example, an invariant with respect to the group of proper orthogonal transformations, called SO(3), is a quantity that remains constant under arbitrary 3D rotations.

Elasticity Tensor  possesses two linear invariants and seven quadratic invariants with respect to SO(3). The linear invariants are

    Elasticity Tensor 

and the quadratic invariants are

    Elasticity Tensor 

These quantities are linearly independent, that is, none can be expressed as a linear combination of the others. They are also complete, in the sense that there are no additional independent linear or quadratic invariants.

Decompositions

A common strategy in tensor analysis is to decompose a tensor into simpler components that can be analyzed separately. For example, the displacement gradient tensor Elasticity Tensor  can be decomposed as

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor  is a rank-0 tensor (a scalar), equal to the trace of Elasticity Tensor ; Elasticity Tensor  is symmetric and trace-free; and Elasticity Tensor  is antisymmetric. Component-wise,

    Elasticity Tensor 

Here and later, symmeterization and antisymmeterization are denoted by Elasticity Tensor  and Elasticity Tensor , respectively. This decomposition is irreducible, in the sense of being invariant under rotations, and is an important tool in the conceptual development of continuum mechanics.

The elasticity tensor has rank 4, and its decompositions are more complex and varied than those of a rank-2 tensor. A few examples are described below.

M and N tensors

This decomposition is obtained by symmeterization and antisymmeterization of the middle two indices:

    Elasticity Tensor 

where

    Elasticity Tensor 

A disadvantage of this decomposition is that Elasticity Tensor  and Elasticity Tensor  do not obey all original symmetries of Elasticity Tensor , as they are not symmetric under interchange of the first two indices. In addition, it is not irreducible, so it is not invariant under linear transformations such as rotations.

Irreducible representations

An irreducible representation can be built by considering the notion of a totally symmetric tensor, which is invariant under the interchange of any two indices. A totally symmetric tensor Elasticity Tensor  can be constructed from Elasticity Tensor  by summing over all Elasticity Tensor  permutations of the indices

    Elasticity Tensor 

where Elasticity Tensor  is the set of all permutations of the four indices. Owing to the symmetries of Elasticity Tensor , this sum reduces to

    Elasticity Tensor 

The difference

    Elasticity Tensor 

is an asymmetric tensor (not antisymmetric). The decomposition Elasticity Tensor  can be shown to be unique and irreducible with respect to Elasticity Tensor . In other words, any additional symmetrization operations on Elasticity Tensor  or Elasticity Tensor  will either leave it unchanged or evaluate to zero. It is also irreducible with respect to arbitrary linear transformations, that is, the general linear group Elasticity Tensor .

However, this decomposition is not irreducible with respect to the group of rotations SO(3). Instead, Elasticity Tensor  decomposes into three irreducible parts, and Elasticity Tensor  into two:

    Elasticity Tensor 

See Itin (2020) for explicit expressions in terms of the components of Elasticity Tensor .

This representation decomposes the space of elasticity tensors into a direct sum of subspaces:

    Elasticity Tensor 

with dimensions

    Elasticity Tensor 

These subspaces are each isomorphic to a harmonic tensor space Elasticity Tensor . Here, Elasticity Tensor  is the space of 3D, totally symmetric, traceless tensors of rank Elasticity Tensor . In particular, Elasticity Tensor  and Elasticity Tensor  correspond to Elasticity Tensor , Elasticity Tensor  and Elasticity Tensor  correspond to Elasticity Tensor , and Elasticity Tensor  corresponds to Elasticity Tensor .

See also

Footnotes

References

Bibliography

Tags:

Elasticity Tensor DefinitionElasticity Tensor Special casesElasticity Tensor PropertiesElasticity Tensor DecompositionsElasticity Tensor FootnotesElasticity Tensor BibliographyElasticity TensorHooke's lawLinear elasticityTensor

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