Rakhi Tiwari, Satyam Sachan, Ahmed Abouelregal, Roushan Kumar, Mohamed E. Elzayady
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This research investigates the impact of thermoelastic coupling on thermally conducting, homogeneous, and isotropic Kelvin–Voigt-type circular microplate resonators. The study utilizes the Moore–Gibson–Thompson technique, which incorporates viscous effects. We examine the use of clamped boundary conditions and obtain analytical solutions in the Laplace-transform domain. In order to clarify the thermomechanical effects on the vibrations of a ceramic Si3N4 plate resonator, we calculate numerical outcomes in the time domain by employing the inverse Laplace transform. We examine the impact of viscosity on many physical phenomena, including deflection, temperature, displacement, thermal moment in the radial direction, and radial stress. We give graphical findings that compare the results with and without the presence of viscosity. The study evaluates the precision and feasibility of the MGTE thermal-conductivity theory by comparing its numerical outcomes with well-established thermoelastic models, such as the classical theory, Lord–Shulman theory, and Green–Naghdi II and III theories. The MGTE theory showcases improved accuracy, facilitating the production of circular micro/nanoplate resonators with exceptional quality and decreased energy dissipation.
期刊介绍:
Mechanics of Time-Dependent Materials accepts contributions dealing with the time-dependent mechanical properties of solid polymers, metals, ceramics, concrete, wood, or their composites. It is recognized that certain materials can be in the melt state as function of temperature and/or pressure. Contributions concerned with fundamental issues relating to processing and melt-to-solid transition behaviour are welcome, as are contributions addressing time-dependent failure and fracture phenomena. Manuscripts addressing environmental issues will be considered if they relate to time-dependent mechanical properties.
The journal promotes the transfer of knowledge between various disciplines that deal with the properties of time-dependent solid materials but approach these from different angles. Among these disciplines are: Mechanical Engineering, Aerospace Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Rheology, Materials Science, Polymer Physics, Design, and others.