4.4 Article

Affine development of closed curves in Weitzenbock manifolds and the Burgers vector of dislocation mechanics

Journal

MATHEMATICS AND MECHANICS OF SOLIDS
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 299-307

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1081286512463720

Keywords

geometric elasticity; Burgers vector; defects; dislocation mechanics

Funding

  1. AFOSR [FA9550-10-1-0378, FA9550-12-1-0290]
  2. NSF [CMMI 1130856]
  3. Directorate For Engineering
  4. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1130856] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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In the theory of dislocations, the Burgers vector is usually defined by referring to a crystal structure. Using the notion of affine development of curves on a differential manifold with a connection, we give a differential geometric definition of the Burgers vector directly in the continuum setting, without making use of an underlying crystal structure. As opposed to some other approaches to the continuum definition of the Burgers vector, our definition is completely geometric, in the sense that it involves no ambiguous operations such as the integration of a vector field: when we integrate a vector field, it is a vector field living in the tangent space at a given point in the manifold. For a body with distributed dislocations, the material manifold, which describes the geometry of the stress-free state of the body, is commonly taken to be a Weitzenbock manifold, i.e. a manifold with a metric-compatible, flat connection with torsion. We show that for such a manifold, the density of the Burgers vector calculated according to our definition reproduces the commonly stated relation between the density of dislocations and the torsion tensor.

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