In Materials Science, fatigue is the process by which a solid exhibits a loss of its elastic properties as a consequence of repeated cycles of loading and unloading. Such failure phenomena occur because microscopic defects appear where the strain oscillates during the evolution, resulting in a considerable macroscopic weakening of the material and, in drastic cases, in rupture.
Fatigue is responsible for most of unforeseen mechanical failures. These affect people and society at all levels, encompassing all possible structures: everyday-life items, human body prostheses, buildings, bridges, ground vehicles, ships, aeroplanes, oil platforms, etc. In most dramatic situations, the consequences of fatigue failure can be catastrophic, causing tremendous financial losses, serious injuries, and deaths.
Investigating fatigue phenomena is a crucial aspect in the Engineering community, however so far scarcely investigated by the Mathematics community. This results in the lack of proofs of consistency and well-posedness for variational models of material fatigue.
The overall aim of the project has been to prove the existence of evolutions for mechanical models of material fatigue.
This has been pursued by examining fatigue in the different contexts of damage, plasticity, and cohesive fracture.