Eliminating flutter for clamped von Karman plates immersed in subsonic flows

Date

2015-09

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Lasiecka, Irena, and Justin Webster. "Eliminating Flutter for Clamped von Karman Plates Immersed in Subsonic Flows." Communications on Pure and Applied Analysis 13, no. 5 (September 1, 2015): 1935–69. https://doi.org/10.3934/cpaa.2014.13.1935.

Rights

This is the version of the article before peer review or editing, as submitted by an author to Eliminating flutter for clamped von Karman plates immersed in subsonic flows https://www.aimsciences.org/article/doi/10.3934/cpaa.2014.13.1935. AIMS is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript, or any version derived from it.

Subjects

Abstract

We address the long-time behavior of a non-rotational von Karman plate in an inviscid potential flow. The model arises in aeroelasticity and models the interaction between a thin, nonlinear panel and a flow of gas in which it is immersed [6, 21, 23]. Recent results in [16, 18] show that the plate component of the dynamics (in the presence of a physical plate nonlinearity) converge to a global compact attracting set of finite dimension; these results were obtained in the absence of mechanical damping of any type. Here we show that, by incorporating mechanical damping the full flow-plate system, full trajectories---both plate and flow---converge strongly to (the set of) stationary states. Weak convergence results require ``minimal' interior damping, and strong convergence of the dynamics are shown with sufficiently large damping. We require the existence of a ``good' energy balance equation, which is only available when the flows are subsonic. Our proof is based on first showing the convergence properties for regular solutions, which in turn requires propagation of initial regularity on the infinite horizon. Then, we utilize the exponential decay of the difference of two plate trajectories to show that full flow-plate trajectories are uniform-in-time Hadamard continuous. This allows us to pass convergence properties of smooth initial data to finite energy type initial data. Physically, our results imply that flutter (a non-static end behavior) does not occur in subsonic dynamics. While such results were known for rotational (compact/regular) plate dynamics [14] (and references therein), the result presented herein is the first such result obtained for non-regularized---the most physically relevant---models.