{"title":"Non-stationary elastic wave scattering and energy transport in a one-dimensional harmonic chain with an isotopic defect","authors":"Serge N. Gavrilov, Ekaterina V. Shishkina","doi":"10.1007/s00161-024-01289-1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>The fundamental solution describing non-stationary elastic wave scattering on an isotopic defect in a one-dimensional harmonic chain is obtained in an asymptotic form. The chain is subjected to unit impulse point loading applied to a particle far enough from the defect. The solution is a large-time asymptotics at a moving point of observation, and it is in excellent agreement with the corresponding numerical calculations. At the next step, we assume that the applied point impulse excitation has random amplitude. This allows one to model the heat transport in the chain and across the defect as the transport of the mathematical expectation for the kinetic energy and to use the conception of the kinetic temperature. To provide a simplified continuum description for this process, we separate the slow in time component of the kinetic temperature. This quantity can be calculated using the asymptotics of the fundamental solution for the deterministic problem. We demonstrate that there is a thermal shadow behind the defect: the order of vanishing for the slow temperature is larger for the particles behind the defect than for the particles between the loading and the defect. The presence of the thermal shadow is related to a non-stationary wave phenomenon, which we call the anti-localization of non-stationary waves. Due to the presence of the shadow, the continuum slow kinetic temperature has a jump discontinuity at the defect. Thus, the system under consideration can be a simple model for the non-stationary phenomenon, analogous to one characterized by the Kapitza thermal resistance. Finally, we analytically calculate the non-stationary transmission function, which describes the distortion (caused by the defect) of the slow kinetic temperature profile at a far zone behind the defect.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":525,"journal":{"name":"Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics","volume":"36 3","pages":"699 - 724"},"PeriodicalIF":1.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00161-024-01289-1","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MECHANICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The fundamental solution describing non-stationary elastic wave scattering on an isotopic defect in a one-dimensional harmonic chain is obtained in an asymptotic form. The chain is subjected to unit impulse point loading applied to a particle far enough from the defect. The solution is a large-time asymptotics at a moving point of observation, and it is in excellent agreement with the corresponding numerical calculations. At the next step, we assume that the applied point impulse excitation has random amplitude. This allows one to model the heat transport in the chain and across the defect as the transport of the mathematical expectation for the kinetic energy and to use the conception of the kinetic temperature. To provide a simplified continuum description for this process, we separate the slow in time component of the kinetic temperature. This quantity can be calculated using the asymptotics of the fundamental solution for the deterministic problem. We demonstrate that there is a thermal shadow behind the defect: the order of vanishing for the slow temperature is larger for the particles behind the defect than for the particles between the loading and the defect. The presence of the thermal shadow is related to a non-stationary wave phenomenon, which we call the anti-localization of non-stationary waves. Due to the presence of the shadow, the continuum slow kinetic temperature has a jump discontinuity at the defect. Thus, the system under consideration can be a simple model for the non-stationary phenomenon, analogous to one characterized by the Kapitza thermal resistance. Finally, we analytically calculate the non-stationary transmission function, which describes the distortion (caused by the defect) of the slow kinetic temperature profile at a far zone behind the defect.
期刊介绍:
This interdisciplinary journal provides a forum for presenting new ideas in continuum and quasi-continuum modeling of systems with a large number of degrees of freedom and sufficient complexity to require thermodynamic closure. Major emphasis is placed on papers attempting to bridge the gap between discrete and continuum approaches as well as micro- and macro-scales, by means of homogenization, statistical averaging and other mathematical tools aimed at the judicial elimination of small time and length scales. The journal is particularly interested in contributions focusing on a simultaneous description of complex systems at several disparate scales. Papers presenting and explaining new experimental findings are highly encouraged. The journal welcomes numerical studies aimed at understanding the physical nature of the phenomena.
Potential subjects range from boiling and turbulence to plasticity and earthquakes. Studies of fluids and solids with nonlinear and non-local interactions, multiple fields and multi-scale responses, nontrivial dissipative properties and complex dynamics are expected to have a strong presence in the pages of the journal. An incomplete list of featured topics includes: active solids and liquids, nano-scale effects and molecular structure of materials, singularities in fluid and solid mechanics, polymers, elastomers and liquid crystals, rheology, cavitation and fracture, hysteresis and friction, mechanics of solid and liquid phase transformations, composite, porous and granular media, scaling in statics and dynamics, large scale processes and geomechanics, stochastic aspects of mechanics. The journal would also like to attract papers addressing the very foundations of thermodynamics and kinetics of continuum processes. Of special interest are contributions to the emerging areas of biophysics and biomechanics of cells, bones and tissues leading to new continuum and thermodynamical models.