Monday, July 18 |
07:00 - 08:15 |
Breakfast ↓ Breakfast is served daily between 7 and 9am in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
08:20 - 08:30 |
Introduction and Welcome by BIRS Staff ↓ A brief introduction to BIRS with important logistical information, technology instruction, and opportunity for participants to ask questions. (TCPL 201) |
08:30 - 09:10 |
Qiang Du: Nonlocal conservation laws and their local limits ↓ We will present some nonlocal variants of nonlinear conservation laws and their mathematical properties such as the preservation of entropy conditions. We will focus on models involving a finite range of nonlocal interactions that can lead to traditional conservation laws in the local limit. We will also consider their applications to traffic flows with connected vehicles. We will illustrate how the proper use of nonlocal information can play important roles in both theory and application. (TCPL 201) |
09:10 - 09:50 |
Carlos Mora Corral: Nonlocal gradients in Nonlinear Elasticity ↓ A fruitful procedure to construct a nonlocal model consists of replacing the classical gradient by a nonlocal one. Nonlocal gradients are diverse, and are specified through a kernel. The choice of the kernel defines the nonlocal gradient and the associated functional space. A particular choice gives rise to Riesz s-fractional gradient, which satisfies some natural properties required for a gradient-like operator and has a degree of differentiabiliy of order 0<s<1. However, they are not adequate for nonlinear elasticity since they require the domain to be the whole space. In this talk we present a truncated version of Riesz fractional gradient which is suitable in nonlinear elasticity. We explain the theory of existence of minimizers based on polyconvexity of the stored energy function. (Online) |
09:50 - 10:30 |
Stewart Silling: The Effect on Nonlocality on Material Stability ↓ Due to the nonlocality of force interactions and the evolution of discontinuities, material instability in
peridynamics exhibits features that are not present in the local theory of elastodynamics. Among these, stress waves can be stable at some wavelengths and propagation directions but unstable in others. At the unstable wavelengths, waveforms grow at a finite rate over time, enabling initial value problems to be solved meaningfully in many cases. This is unlike the local theory, in which elastically unstable materials can blow up instantaneously.
In some situations, nonlocal material instability can be useful in modeling the evolution of failure
realistically. Because waveforms in the unstable regime of wave propagation grow at a bounded rate over time, they can be useful in the modeling the details of crack nucleation. The process zone surrounding the tip of a growing crack can also contain material points where the underlying material model is unstable.
This talk will present a summary of results on unstable wave growth and the role of material instability in
the modeling of fracture and microstructure evolution within peridynamics. Recent results on the self-
shaping of elastic peridynamic fibers, an effect that occurs due to a type of material instability, will also
be discussed. (Online) |
10:30 - 10:50 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
10:50 - 11:30 |
Michael Parks: On Neumann-type Boundary Conditions for Nonlocal Models ↓ Peridynamics is a nonlocal reformulation of continuum mechanics that is suitable for representing fracture and failure. For practical engineering applications, precise application of boundary conditions is essential. However, nonlocal boundary conditions (sometimes called volume constraints), especially of Neumann type, remain poorly understood. We begin with a discussion of the nonlocal boundary (sometimes called a “collar”) within a nonlocal model and review some practical approaches to application of boundary conditions over this domain. We then focus our discussion on nonlocal diffusion models and present a new approach for nonlocal boundary conditions of Neumann-type supported by numerical convergence studies. (TCPL 201) |
11:30 - 12:10 |
Pablo Seleson: Analysis of the overall equilibrium in local-to-nonlocal coupling ↓ Local-to-nonlocal (LtN) coupling is a popular approach to combine the strengths of nonlocal and local modeling to attain efficient and accurate solutions of nonlocal problems. In LtN coupling, nonlocal models are employed in regions exhibiting phenomena not well represented by local PDE-based models, while coupled to those local models used elsewhere for computational expediency. An example of this in solid mechanics is the combination of the computational efficiency of classical continuum mechanics with the capability to simulate crack propagation of peridynamics. A main issue in LtN coupling is the appearance of coupling artifacts around coupling interfaces which pollute the solutions of coupled problems. Common artifacts include failure of passing patch tests in static problems and artificial wave reflections in dynamic problems. In this talk, we will present a coupling artifact that has been overlooked in the LtN coupling literature: the lack of overall equilibrium. We will analyze the problem of the overall equilibrium in LtN coupling and demonstrate that this artifact originates from the lack of balance between local and nonlocal tractions at coupling interfaces, which commonly results from the presence of high-order derivatives of displacements in the coupling zone. Our analysis will be presented through an approach to couple peridynamics and classical continuum mechanics called splice. Numerical results will be shown to confirm the analysis and demonstrate its applicability in the development of adaptive strategies for the modeling of problems with evolving fractures. This is a joint work with Greta Ongaro, Ugo Galvanetto, Tao Ni, and Mirco Zaccariotto. (TCPL 201) |
12:10 - 13:45 |
Lunch ↓ Lunch is served daily between 11:30am and 1:30pm in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
13:45 - 14:00 |
Group Photo ↓ Meet in foyer of TCPL to participate in the BIRS group photo. The photograph will be taken outdoors, so dress appropriately for the weather. Please don't be late, or you might not be in the official group photo! (TCPL Foyer) |
14:00 - 14:20 |
Nicole Buczkowski: Stability of solutions to nonlocal systems with heterogeneous kernels ↓ To be physically relevant, mathematical models must guarantee existence and uniqueness of solutions, as well as continuity with respect to the data. Thus, small changes in data or parameters will lead to appropriate changes in the solution. The kernel in nonlocal models adds flexibility in handling discontinuities by recording long range interactions. We consider the stability of the solution with regards to changes in the forcing term, the nonlocal boundary term, and the kernel(s) (a part of the operator itself) all incorporating heterogeneous kernels. The biharmonic operator appears in modeling deformations and damage in beams and plates. We extend these continuous dependence results to these nonlocal higher order operators in a version of the nonlocal biharmonic that iterates the nonlocal Laplacian. (TCPL 201) |
14:20 - 14:40 |
Ludwig Striet: A numerical study of a variational problem related to swarming ↓ We consider a nonlocal functional introduced by Burchard, Choksi, and Topaloglu and develop a numerical method based on a piecewise constant function approximation. The variation of the functional is a (block-)Töplitz operator which can be applied using fast Fourier transforms in O(NlogN) time, where N is the number of degrees of freedom. Combined with a suitable iterative solver and an interior point optimization method, we numerically find minimizers of the nonlocal swarming functional and study their dependence on parameters. (TCPL 201) |
14:40 - 15:00 |
Hayley Olson: Convergence of for nonlinear nonlocal diffusion models in the limit of the vanishing horizon ↓ Nonlinear diffusion models have a wide variety of applications, including but not limited to temperature dependent diffusion of materials and liquid movement through porous mediums. Integrating these operators to the nonlocal calculus framework allows us to decrease the regularity requirements for the solutions to nonlinear diffusion systems. Here, we show that the actions of a specific class of nonlinear nonlocal operators converge to the actions of their classical counterpart. Additionally, we consider the existence and convergence of solutions to nonlocal nonlinear systems with Dirichlet boundary conditions in the limit of the vanishing horizon. (TCPL 201) |
15:00 - 16:00 |
Virtual Poster Session (Online) |
17:30 - 19:30 |
Dinner ↓ A buffet dinner is served daily between 5:30pm and 7:30pm in Vistas Dining Room, top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |