Published June 23, 2025 | Version v1
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The circular disc made of linear elastic incompressible material and the 'bathyscaphe lesson'

  • 1. ROR icon University of Trento
  • 2. EDMO icon University of Minnesota Twin Cities
  • 3. ROR icon Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati

Description

A linear elastic circular disc is analyzed under a self-equilibrated system of loads applied along its boundary. A distinctive feature of the investigation, conducted using complex variable analysis, is the assumption that the material is incompressible (in its linearized approximation), rendering the governing equations formally identical to those of Stokes flow in viscous fluids. After deriving a general solution to the problem, an isoperimetric constraint is introduced at the boundary to enforce inextensibility. This effect can be physically realized, for example, by attaching an inextensible elastic rod with negligible bending stiffness to the perimeter. Although the combined imposition of material incompressibility and boundary inextensibility theoretically prevents any deformation of the disc, it is shown that the problem still admits non-trivial solutions. This apparent paradox is resolved by recognizing the approximations inherent in the linearized theory, as confirmed by a geometrically nonlinear numerical analysis. Nonetheless, the linear solution retains significance: it may represent a valid stress distribution within a rigid system and can identify critical conditions of interest for design applications.

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Additional details

Related works

Is identical to
Journal article: 10.1016/j.ijsolstr.2025.113548 (DOI)

Funding

European Commission
Beyond - Beyond hyperelasticity: a virgin land of extreme materials 101052956
European Commission
S-FOAM - Self-Foldable Origami-Architected Metamaterials 101086644