Theory of continuous rate-dependent hysteresis

•Mathematical textbooks on hysteresis use rate independence to define hysteresis processes.•Experimental evidence shows that rate independence is but an approximation of real hysteresis systems.•We propose a mathematical framework in which we can study a class of hysteresis systems that are not rate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications in nonlinear science & numerical simulation 2020-01, Vol.80, p.104970, Article 104970
1. Verfasser: Ikhouane, Fayçal
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Mathematical textbooks on hysteresis use rate independence to define hysteresis processes.•Experimental evidence shows that rate independence is but an approximation of real hysteresis systems.•We propose a mathematical framework in which we can study a class of hysteresis systems that are not rate independent. Hysteresis is a special type of behavior ubiquitous in science and engineering: it consists in that slow inputs produce a loop in the steady-state part of the graph output-versus-input. On the other hand, mathematical textbooks on hysteresis use a different property to define hysteresis processes: rate independence. This property says that the graph output-versus-input remains unchanged under a time-scale change. However, experimental evidence shows the existence of physical processes that produce loops in steady state for slow inputs without being rate independent: these processes are called rate-dependent hysteresis. This fact raises the following issue. How can we build a framework in which we can study hysteresis phenomena for which the rate-independence approximation is insufficient? The attempts to answer this question have been few and limited up till now. In this paper we propose a mathematical framework for the description and analysis of rate-dependent hysteresis processes for which a continuous input produces a continuous output and a continuous hysteresis loop. The methodology that we use to obtain our theory consists in (1) making a list of experimentally observed properties of hysteresis which we call inferences, (2) proposing a mathematical equation -called premise- as a characteristic of hysteresis systems, and (3) proving analytically that the premise leads to all inferences. The operational formulation that we use provides a high degree of generality, and leads to several inferences from one single premise. To illustrate the usefulness of the tools that we introduce, we propose a mathematical model that generates rate-dependent operators from rate-independent ones. We provide the analytic expression of the hysteresis loop of the rate-dependent operator in terms of the hysteresis loop of its rate-independent component. This result is illustrated by means of numerical simulations.
ISSN:1007-5704
1878-7274
DOI:10.1016/j.cnsns.2019.104970