@phdthesis{Kortum2022, author = {Kortum, Joshua}, title = {Global Existence and Uniqueness Results for Nematic Liquid Crystal and Magnetoviscoelastic Flows}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-27827}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-278271}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Liquid crystals and polymeric fluids are found in many technical applications with liquid crystal displays probably being the most prominent one. Ferromagnetic materials are well established in industrial and everyday use, e.g. as magnets in generators, transformers and hard drive disks. Among ferromagnetic materials, we find a subclass which undergoes deformations if an external magnetic field is applied. This effect is exploited in actuators, magnetoelastic sensors, and new fluid materials have been produced which retain their induced magnetization during the flow. A central issue consists of a proper modelling for those materials. Several models exist regarding liquid crystals and liquid crystal flows, but up to now, none of them has provided a full insight into all observed effects. On materials encompassing magnetic, elastic and perhaps even fluid dynamic effects, the mathematical literature seems sparse in terms of models. To some extent, one can unify the modeling of nematic liquid crystals and magnetoviscoelastic materials employing a so-called energetic variational approach. Using the least action principle from theoretical physics, the actual task reduces to finding appropriate energies describing the observed behavior. The procedure leads to systems of evolutionary partial differential equations, which are analyzed in this work. From the mathematical point of view, fundamental questions on existence, uniqueness and stability of solutions remain unsolved. Concerning the Ericksen-Leslie system modelling nematic liquid crystal flows, an approximation to this model is given by the so-called Ginzburg-Landau approximation. Solutions to the latter are intended to approximately represent solutions to the Ericksen-Leslie system. Indeed, we verify this presumption in two spatial dimensions. More precisely, it is shown that weak solutions of the Ginzburg-Landau approximation converge to solutions of the Ericksen-Leslie system in the energy space for all positive times of evolution. In order to do so, theory for the Euler equations invented by DiPerna and Majda on weak compactness and concentration measures is used. The second part of the work deals with a system of partial differential equations modelling magnetoviscoelastic fluids. We provide a well-posedness result in two spatial dimensions for large energies and large times. Along the verification of that conclusion, existing theory on the Ericksen-Leslie system and the harmonic map flow is deployed and suitably extended.}, subject = {Magnetoelastizit{\"a}t}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Forster2016, author = {Forster, Johannes}, title = {Variational Approach to the Modeling and Analysis of Magnetoelastic Materials}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-147226}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2016}, abstract = {This doctoral thesis is concerned with the mathematical modeling of magnetoelastic materials and the analysis of PDE systems describing these materials and obtained from a variational approach. The purpose is to capture the behavior of elastic particles that are not only magnetic but exhibit a magnetic domain structure which is well described by the micromagnetic energy and the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation of the magnetization. The equation of motion for the material's velocity is derived in a continuum mechanical setting from an energy ansatz. In the modeling process, the focus is on the interplay between Lagrangian and Eulerian coordinate systems to combine elasticity and magnetism in one model without the assumption of small deformations. The resulting general PDE system is simplified using special assumptions. Existence of weak solutions is proved for two variants of the PDE system, one including gradient flow dynamics on the magnetization, and the other featuring the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation. The proof is based on a Galerkin method and a fixed point argument. The analysis of the PDE system with the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation uses a more involved approach to obtain weak solutions based on G. Carbou and P. Fabrie 2001.}, subject = {Magnetoelastizit{\"a}t}, language = {en} }