English

Buckling transition and boundary layer in non-Euclidean plates

Soft Condensed Matter 2009-05-29 v2

Abstract

Non-Euclidean plates are thin elastic bodies having no stress-free configuration, hence exhibiting residual stresses in the absence of external constraints. These bodies are endowed with a three-dimensional reference metric, which may not necessarily be immersible in physical space. Here, based on a recently developed theory for such bodies, we characterize the transition from flat to buckled equilibrium configurations at a critical value of the plate thickness. Depending of the reference metric, the buckling transition may be either continuous or discontinuous. In the infinitely thin plate limit, under the assumption that a limiting configuration exists, we show that the limit is a configuration that minimizes the bending content, amongst all configurations with zero stretching content (isometric immersions of the mid-surface). For small but finite plate thickness we show the formation of a boundary layer, whose size scales with the square root of the plate thickness, and whose shape is determined by a balance between stretching and bending energies.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0902.2841,
  title  = {Buckling transition and boundary layer in non-Euclidean plates},
  author = {Efi Efrati and Eran Sharon and Raz Kupferman},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0902.2841},
  year   = {2009}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:12:21.073Z