Exact Spectral Moments and Differentiability of the Weierstrass-Mandelbrot Fractal Function

2019 ◽  
Vol 142 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Itzhak Green

Abstract Fractal mathematics using the Weierstrass-Mandelbrot (WM) function has spread to many fields of science and engineering. One of these is the fractal characterization of rough surfaces, which has gained ample acceptance in the area of contact mechanics. That is, a single mathematical expression (the WM function) contains characteristics that mimic the appearance of roughness. Moreover, the “roughness” is “similar” across large dimension scales ranging from macro to nano. The field of contact mechanics is largely divided into two schools of thought: (1) the roughness of real surfaces is essentially random, for which stochastic treatment is appropriate, and (2) surface roughness can be reduced to fractal mathematics using fractal parameters. Under certain mathematical constraints, the WM function is either stochastic or deterministic. The latter has the appeal that it contains no randomness, so fractal mathematics may offer closed-form solutions. Spectral moments of rough surfaces still apply to both approaches, as these represent physical metrology properties of the surface standard deviation, slope, and curvature. In essence, spectral moments provide a means of data reduction so that other physical processes can subsequently be applied. It is well known, for example, that the contact model of rough surfaces, by Greenwood and Williamson (GW), depends on parameters that are direct outcomes of these moments. Despite the vast amount of publications on the WM function dedicated to surfaces, two papers stand out as originators, where the others mostly rework their results. These two papers, however, contain some omissions and approximations that may lead to gross errors in the estimation of the spectral moments. The current work revisits these papers and adds information, but departs in the mathematical treatment to derive exact expressions for the said moments. Moreover, it is said that the WM function is nondifferential. That is also revisited herein, as another approach to derive the spectral moments depends on such derivatives. First, the complete mathematical treatment of the WM function is made, then the spectral moments are derived to yield exact forms, and finally, examples are given where the physical meanings of the approximate and exact moments are discussed and their values are compared. Numerical procedures will be introduced for both, and the effectiveness of the computational effort is discussed. One numerical procedure is particularly effective for any digitized signal, whether that originates from analytical functions (e.g., WM) or real surface measurements.

2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyosuke Ono

A new numerical method of analyzing adhesive contact mechanics between a sphere and a flat with sub-nanometer roughness is presented. In contrast to conventional theories, the elastic deformations of mean height surfaces and contacting asperities, and Lennard-Jones (LJ) surface forces of both the contacting asperities and noncontacting rough surfaces including valley areas are taken into account. Calculated contact characteristics of a 2-mm-radius glass slider contacting a magnetic disk with a relatively rough surface and a 30-mm-radius head slider contacting a currently available magnetic disk with lower roughness are shown in comparison with conventional adhesive contact theories. The present theory was found to give a larger adhesive force than the conventional theories and to converge to a smooth sphere-flat contact theory as the roughness height approaches zero.


1984 ◽  
Vol 106 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Niedzwecki

The behavior of waves interacting with islands has gained renewed interest with the construction of exploratory drilling islands in the Arctic. This paper focuses upon the behavior of waves incident upon axisymmetric islands characterized by circular contours which vary with water depth. The island profiles of Arthur and Pocinki, which have closed form solutions, and a single tier conical island are examined. A new dimensionless formulation of Arthur’s ray theory and an extremely accurate numerical procedure to evaluate the ray integrals are presented. It is shown that each island profile leads to a distinct wave pattern about the island. These wave patterns are presented in figures which portray the wave capture and wave breaking about circular islands. It is intended that the methodology presented be used to initially assess trends and to evaluate the need for more refined analyses.


Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-50
Author(s):  
Gungor D. Beskardes ◽  
Chester J. Weiss ◽  
Evan Um ◽  
Michael Wilt ◽  
Kris MacLennan

Well integrity is one of the major concerns in long-term geologic storage sites due to its potential risk for well leakage and groundwater contamination. Evaluating changes in electrical responses due to energized steel-cased wells has the potential to quantify and predict possible wellbore failures as any kind of breakage or corrosion along highly-conductive well casings will have an impact on the distribution of subsurface electrical potential. However, realistic wellbore-geoelectrical models that can fully capture fine scale details of well completion design and state of well damage at the field scale require extensive computational effort or can even be intractable to simulate. To overcome this computational burden while still keeping the model realistic, we utilize the Hierarchical Finite Element Method which represents electrical conductivity at each dimensional component (1-D edges, 2-D planes and 3-D cells) of a tetrahedra mesh. This allows us to consider well completion designs with real-life geometric scales and well systems with realistic, detailed, progressive corrosion and damage in our models. Here, we present a comparison of possible discretization approaches of a multi-casing completion design in the finite element model. The impacts of the surface casing length and the coupling between concentric well casings, as well as the effects of the degree and the location of well damage on the electrical responses are also examined. Finally, we analyze real surface electric field data to detect the wellbore integrity failure associated with damage.


2019 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 731-749
Author(s):  
Jacopo Bonari ◽  
Maria R. Marulli ◽  
Nora Hagmeyer ◽  
Matthias Mayr ◽  
Alexander Popp ◽  
...  

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