This paper deals with a contact problem describing the mechanical and thermal evolution of a damped extensible thermoviscoelastic beam under the Cattaneo law, relating the heat flux to the gradient of the temperature. The beam is rigidly clamped at its left end whereas the right end of the beam moves vertically between reactive stops like a nonlinear spring. Existence and uniqueness of the solution is proved, as well as the exponential decay of the related energy. Then, fully discrete approximations are introduced by using the classical finite element method and the implicit Euler scheme to approximate the spatial variable and to discretize the time derivatives, respectively. An a priori error estimates result is proved, from which the linear convergence of the algorithm is deduced. The case where the two stops are rigid is also studied from the point of view of the existence and longtime behavior of the solutions. Finally, some numerical simulations are presented to demonstrate the accuracy of the approximation and the behavior of the solution.

A dynamic thermoviscoelastic contact problem with the second sound effect

BERTI, ALESSIA;
2015-01-01

Abstract

This paper deals with a contact problem describing the mechanical and thermal evolution of a damped extensible thermoviscoelastic beam under the Cattaneo law, relating the heat flux to the gradient of the temperature. The beam is rigidly clamped at its left end whereas the right end of the beam moves vertically between reactive stops like a nonlinear spring. Existence and uniqueness of the solution is proved, as well as the exponential decay of the related energy. Then, fully discrete approximations are introduced by using the classical finite element method and the implicit Euler scheme to approximate the spatial variable and to discretize the time derivatives, respectively. An a priori error estimates result is proved, from which the linear convergence of the algorithm is deduced. The case where the two stops are rigid is also studied from the point of view of the existence and longtime behavior of the solutions. Finally, some numerical simulations are presented to demonstrate the accuracy of the approximation and the behavior of the solution.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11389/11777
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