Solid Mechanics

Solid Mechanics describes the behavior of a solid continuum in response to applied loads. Applied loads include body forces, surface loads, point forces, or thermal loads that result from changes in the solid temperature. Applied loads induce a stress field in the structure and can cause displacement of the structure—from an initial undeformed configuration to a deformed configuration.

The Solid Mechanics formulation uses the following conventions:
  • The coordinates in the initial (undeformed) configuration are denoted by capital letters, whereas the coordinates in the current (deformed) configuration are denoted by lower case letters. The same convention applies to the indices identifying the components of any vector in the undeformed and deformed configurations. For example:
    • X is the position vector in the initial configuration, x is the position vector in the current configuration.
    • XI , with I=1,2,3 , denotes the components of X in the initial configuration. The formulation also uses X,Y,Z for X1,X2,X3 .
    • σij are the components of the stress tensor in the current configuration.
  • The indices i and j (either upper or lower case) are reserved for coordinates, whereas the indices M and N identify element nodes.
  • When using the index notation (see Vector and Tensor Representations), this formulation uses the Einstein convention, which implies summation over a set of repeated indices.
  • The terms vertex and node are used interchangeably.