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Heterogeneous Media. Local Fields, Effective Properties, and Wave Propagation. Elsevier Series in Mechanics of Advanced Materials

  • Book

  • September 2020
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5029590

Heterogeneous Media: Local Fields, Effective Properties, and Wave Propagation outlines new computational methods for solving volume integral equation problems in heterogeneous media. The book starts by surveying the various numerical methods of analysis of static and dynamic fields in heterogeneous media, listing their strengths and weaknesses, before moving onto an introduction of static and dynamic green functions for homogeneous media. Volume and surface integral equations for fields in heterogenous media are discussed next, followed by an overview of explicit formulas for numerical calculations of volume and surface potentials.

The book then segues into Gaussian functions for discretization of volume integral equations for fields in heterogenous media, static problems for a homogeneous host medium with heterogeneous inclusions, volume integral equations for scattering problems, and concludes with a chapter outlining solutions to homogenization problems and calculations of effective properties of heterogeneous media. The book concludes with multiple appendices that feature the texts of basic programs for solving volume integral equations as written in Mathematica.

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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Homogeneous media with external and internal field sources
  3. Volume and surface integral equations for physical fields in heterogeneous media
  4. Numerical calculation of volume and surface potentials
  5. Numerical solution of volume integral equations for static fields in heterogeneous media
  6. Cracks in heterogeneous media
  7. Time-harmonic fields in heterogeneous media
  8. Quasistatic crack growth in heterogeneous media
  9. The homogenization problem

Authors

Sergey Kanaun Professor, Technological Institute of Higher Education of Monterrey, State Mexico Campus, Mexico. Professor Kanaun is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the Technological Institute of Higher Education of Monterrey, State Mexico Campus, Mexico. His core areas of research are continuum mechanics, mechanics of composites, micromechanics, elasticity, plasticity, and fracture mechanics. Prior to his current teaching post he was a Professor at the Technical University of Novosibirsk in Russia and also Chief Researcher at the Institute of Engineering Problems of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Saint Petersburg, also in Russia. He has advised 6 Master's theses and 5 Ph.D. theses, and has published over 50 articles in peer-reviewed journals.