Strain-Displacement Relations
In the membrane theory of shells, the strain-displacement relations provide the kinematic foundation for linking the displacements of the shell midsurface to the resulting membrane strains, under the assumption of negligible transverse shear and bending effects. These relations are derived within the framework of differential geometry on curved surfaces, where the shell is modeled as a two-dimensional manifold embedded in three-dimensional space. The tangential displacements are denoted by the vector u=(uα)\mathbf{u} = (u_\alpha)u=(uα) in curvilinear coordinates (α,β)(\alpha, \beta)(α,β) on the midsurface, and www represents the normal displacement. The membrane strain tensor ϵαβ\epsilon_{\alpha\beta}ϵαβ captures the in-plane extensions and shears, incorporating the effects of both tangential stretching and the rotation induced by normal deflection due to surface curvature.
The explicit form of the membrane strain tensor in covariant components is given by
where the semicolon denotes the covariant derivative with respect to the surface metric, bαβb_{\alpha\beta}bαβ is the second fundamental form (curvature tensor) describing the principal curvatures, and www is the scalar normal displacement. This expression linearizes the Green-Lagrange strain tensor for small deformations, separating the symmetric part of the tangential displacement gradient from the curvature-induced term that arises as the normal displacement alters the surface geometry. The covariant derivative ensures invariance under coordinate transformations, making the formulation applicable to arbitrary shell geometries. This standard relation originates from asymptotic expansions of three-dimensional elasticity for thin structures and is fundamental to linear shell theories.[22]
For shells of revolution, which possess axial symmetry and are commonly analyzed using meridional angle ϕ\phiϕ and azimuthal angle θ\thetaθ as coordinates, the strain-displacement relations simplify into principal directions aligned with the generators and parallels. Here, uϕu_\phiuϕ denotes the displacement tangent to the meridian, uθu_\thetauθ the circumferential displacement, RϕR_\phiRϕ the principal radius of curvature along the meridian, RθR_\thetaRθ along the parallel, and rrr the distance from the axis of revolution (parallel radius, r=Rϕsinϕr = R_\phi \sin \phir=Rϕsinϕ for a sphere). For the axisymmetric case (uθ=0u_\theta = 0uθ=0, no θ\thetaθ-dependence), the meridional strain is
while the hoop strain is
These expressions account for the extension along the curving meridian and the change in circumference of the parallel circles, respectively, with the cotϕ\cot \phicotϕ term reflecting the geometry of revolution (e.g., for a sphere of radius RRR, r=Rsinϕr = R \sin \phir=Rsinϕ, Rϕ=Rθ=RR_\phi = R_\theta = RRϕ=Rθ=R, yielding uniform ϵϕ=ϵθ=w/R\epsilon_\phi = \epsilon_\theta = w / Rϵϕ=ϵθ=w/R for pure radial displacement uϕ=0u_\phi = 0uϕ=0, w=w =w= constant). They reduce to ordinary differential equations solvable along the meridian.[23]
Under pure membrane action, where bending stiffness is neglected, an inextensibility condition may apply in certain approximations, such as for developable surfaces or pre-stressed membranes. In this context, the change in Gaussian curvature KKK of the deformed midsurface is intrinsically related to the membrane strains through the Gauss-Theorema egregium, which states that KKK is determined solely by the first fundamental form (metric tensor) of the surface. The linearized compatibility equations for the strains ϵαβ\epsilon_{\alpha\beta}ϵαβ ensure that the induced metric change preserves surface integrability, linking ∂2ϵαβ/∂xα∂xβ\partial^2 \epsilon_{\alpha\beta} / \partial x^\alpha \partial x^\beta∂2ϵαβ/∂xα∂xβ (in appropriate components) to ΔK\Delta KΔK, the variation in Gaussian curvature. This geometric constraint is crucial for solvability in membrane problems without bending moments, as it enforces that the strains correspond to a realizable deformation field.
The aforementioned relations rely on the small strain approximation, valid when the gradient of displacements satisfies ∣∇u∣≪1|\nabla \mathbf{u}| \ll 1∣∇u∣≪1 and higher-order terms like (∇u)2(\nabla \mathbf{u})^2(∇u)2 or products involving w/Rw / Rw/R (where RRR is a characteristic radius of curvature) are negligible compared to unity. This linearization simplifies the exact nonlinear kinematic relations from three-dimensional continuum mechanics to a first-order theory, enabling closed-form solutions for many shell geometries while maintaining accuracy for moderately thin structures under small deflections. Constitutive relations then link these strains to membrane stress resultants, but such connections are addressed separately.[24]
Stress Resultants
In the membrane theory of shells, stress resultants represent the integrated in-plane forces per unit length acting on the shell's middle surface, obtained by integrating the three-dimensional stress components through the shell thickness while neglecting bending and shear effects. The components of the membrane stress resultant tensor, NαβN_{\alpha\beta}Nαβ, are defined as
where σαβ\sigma_{\alpha\beta}σαβ denotes the in-plane stress tensor components in the curvilinear coordinates (α,β)(\alpha, \beta)(α,β) tangent to the shell surface, hhh is the shell thickness, and zzz is the coordinate normal to the middle surface. This formulation assumes that σαβ\sigma_{\alpha\beta}σαβ varies negligibly through the thickness, justified by the thin-shell approximation (h≪Rh \ll Rh≪R, with RRR the principal radius of curvature) and the exclusion of transverse normal stresses and moments, leading to a pure state of tangential membrane stress.[25]
In orthogonal curvilinear coordinates aligned with the principal curvature directions, the stress resultants simplify to principal components: the meridional resultant N1N_1N1 (or NϕN_\phiNϕ) acting along the meridian curve, and the circumferential (hoop) resultant N2N_2N2 (or NθN_\thetaNθ) perpendicular to it, with the shear component N12N_{12}N12 (or NϕθN_{\phi\theta}Nϕθ) coupling them in non-orthogonal cases. For instance, in a thin-walled cylindrical shell under uniform internal pressure ppp and radius rrr, the hoop stress resultant is Nθ=prN_\theta = p rNθ=pr, while the longitudinal resultant is Nϕ=pr/2N_\phi = p r / 2Nϕ=pr/2, illustrating how geometry dictates the distribution of these forces to maintain equilibrium. These principal resultants capture the load-carrying capacity in the tangential plane, with their magnitudes depending on the shell's Gaussian curvature and applied loads.[25][26]
The paths of stress resultants in shells can be visualized as "force flow" lines tracing the tangential transmission of loads across the surface, analogous to streamlines in fluid mechanics, which highlight regions of tension, compression, or shear without invoking three-dimensional stress fields. This representation underscores the membrane theory's focus on in-plane force balance, where resultants follow geodesic paths on the developable surface for minimal energy. Seminal formulations of these concepts trace to Love's integration of elasticity principles for thin shells.[25]
For shells with variable thickness h(α,β)h(\alpha, \beta)h(α,β), the integration for NαβN_{\alpha\beta}Nαβ is performed locally over the varying hhh, often approximated by weighting with an average thickness or assuming piecewise constancy to simplify computations; however, classical analyses typically presume uniform hhh to maintain analytical tractability. This assumption aligns with the theory's origins in Love's work and subsequent refinements by Flügge and Timoshenko for practical engineering applications.[25][26]