Abstract
The Duhem model is a simulacrum of a complex and hazy reality: hysteresis. Introduced by Pierre Duhem to provide a mathematical representation of thermodynamical irreversibility, it is used to describe hysteresis in other areas of science and engineering. Our aim is to survey the relationship between the Duhem model as a mathematical representation, and hysteresis as the object of that representation.
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Change history
08 August 2017
An erratum to this article has been published.
Notes
There are no specified authors. The one-page preface written by M. V. cites the following people as co–authors or co–authors to be: M. Edouard Jordan, M. J. Hadamard, M. L. Marchis, M. H. Pélabon, M. Ed. Le Roy, and M. Darbon. However, the chapters bear the following names. The biography of P. Duhem is written by E. Jordan. The “Notice sur les titres et travaux scientifiques de Pierre Duhem” is the note Duhem wrote himself when he applied to the Académie des Sciences. The following chapter “La physique de P. Duhem” is written by Octave Manville. The chapter “L’œuvre de Pierre Duhem dans son aspect mathématique” is authored by J. Hadamard. Finally “L’histoire des sciences dans l’œuvre de P. Duhem” is written by A. Darbon.
We are indebted to Jean François Stoffel for this information.
Quoting from Ref. [48, p. 96]: “the Madelung paper does not use a differential equation or integral operator. In fact, Madelung allows nonuniqueness of trajectories through a point \(\ldots \) which would make a differential equation model difficult.”
The term “rate independence” is attributed to Truesdell and Noll (Section 99, Encyclopedia of Phyics, volume III/3, 1965) by Visintin [64, p. 13]. We read Section 99 of the 2004 edition [62] of the original treatise by Truesdell and Noll but found no clear evidence of the correctness of the attribution.
Called the Madelung model in Ref. [43].
In this paper we avoid the words “positive”, “negative”, “increasing”, “decreasing” as they mean different things in different books.
If the functions \(h_{\ell }\) and \(h_r\) are continuous then they are Borel and locally bounded. Continuity is the condition that appears in Ref. [48].
Ref. [54] considers that u is continuous and piecewise \(C^1\). However, the results that we present here are also valid for inputs belonging to \(W^{1,\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}).\)
u is non constant if \(\exists t_1,t_2 \in \mathbb {R}_+\) such that \(u(t_1)\ne u(t_2)\).
In the proof of [54, Proposition 5.1] Oh and Bernstein use as input \(u \circ s_\gamma \) where \(u \in \Lambda \), and obtain by a limiting process a rate-independent semilinear Duhem model. In Ref. [35], Ikhouane extends this idea to causal operators \(\mathcal {H}:W^{1,\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}^p) \times \Xi \rightarrow L^{\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}^m)\) that satisfy Assumption 3, and to inputs that belong to \(W^{1,\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}^p) \).
To the best of our knowledge, proposing a formal definition of hysteresis based on the existence of a hysteresis loop was first done by Oh and Bernstein in Ref. [54] for the generalized Duhem model, and for inputs belonging to \(\Lambda \). Ikhouane used a different perspective to generalize this idea to causal operators \(\mathcal {H}:W^{1,\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}^p) \times \Xi \rightarrow L^{\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}^m)\) that satisfy Assumption 3, and to periodic inputs that belong to \(W^{1,\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}^p) \) [35].
Indeed, if \(\lambda \in \;]0,1[\), Eqs. (17)–(18) lead to \(x(t)=x_0,\forall t \in \mathbb {R}_+\). If \(\lambda \in \;]1,\infty [\), \(\varphi _u^{\star }\) is identically \(x_0\) which implies that \(\varphi _u^{\circ }\) is identically \(x_0\). In both cases the operator \(\mathcal {H}_s\) has a trivial hysteresis loop with respect to all inputs and initial states (see Definition 9).
The condition that functions \(\lambda _1,\lambda _2\) are bounded on any bounded interval does not appear in Ref. [40]. However, without this condition there is no guarantee that the maximal interval of existence of the solutions of (34)–(36) is \([0,\infty [\), see Sect. 4.2. In [43, p. 278] it is considered that \(\lambda _1=\lambda _2\) is continuous so that the local boundedness condition holds.
Since all the results of this section are proved for a finite time interval, Ref. [64] considers that the differential equation (43)–(44) holds almost everywhere on that finite time interval. We consider that the differential equation (43)–(44) holds almost everywhere on \(\mathbb {R}_+\) to simplify the discussion of Sect. 12.2 without loss of generality.
If \(\displaystyle {\lim _{w \downarrow 0}\bar{g}_1(w)=a_1\ne 0}\) and \(\displaystyle {\lim _{w \uparrow 0}\bar{g}_2(w)=-a_2 \ne 0}\), the constants \(a_1\) and \(a_2\) are incorporated into the matrices \(A_1\) and \(A_2\) respectively.
A matrix is stable if all its eigenvalues have strictly negative real parts.
These special cases of are not studied in Ref. [35].
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Funding
This study was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (Grant Number DPI2016-77407-P (AEI/FEDER, UE).
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Appendices
Appendix
1.1 On the Existence and Uniqueness of Solutions of Differential Equations
In this section we present some existence and uniqueness theorems for the solutions of ordinary differential equations. To this end, let \(\mathcal {D}\) be a domain, that is an open connected subset of \(\mathbb {R} \times \mathbb {R}^{n}\) where \(n>0\) is an integer. Let \((t_0,x_0) \in \mathcal {D}\) and let \(a,b \in \; ]0,\infty [.\) Define the parallelepiped \(Q_{a,b}\) by
We say that the map \(F:\mathcal {D} \rightarrow \mathbb {R}^{n}\) satisfies the Carathéodory conditions on the domain \(\mathcal {D}\) if Conditions (i)–(iii) hold on any parallelepiped \(Q_{a,b} \subset \mathcal {D}\) [61, p. 68].
-
(i)
The function F is defined and continuous in w for almost all t;
-
(ii)
the function F is measurable in t for each fixed w;
-
(iii)
for each \(Q_{a,b} \subset \mathcal {D}\) there exists a measurable function \(m_{Q_{a,b}} \in L^1\big ([t_0-a,t_0+a],\mathbb {R}\big )\) such that
$$\begin{aligned}&|F(t,w)| \le m_{Q_{a,b}}(t), \; \forall w \in \mathbb {R}^{n} \text { and for almost all } \nonumber \\&t \in [t_0-a,t_0+a] \text { satisfying } (t,w) \in Q_{a,b}. \end{aligned}$$(128)
Now, consider the differential equation
where \(F:\mathcal {D} \rightarrow \mathbb {R}^{n}\) satisfies the Carathéodory conditions on the domain \(\mathcal {D} \subset \mathbb {R} \times \mathbb {R}^{n}\) and \((t_0,x_0) \in \mathcal {D}\).
Theorem 10
[61, p. 68] The differential equation (129)–(130) has a solution on some nonempty open interval \(I \ni t_0,\) in the sense that there exists an absolutely continuous function \(x:I\rightarrow \mathbb {R}^{n}\) such that the following properties (i)–(iii) are satisfied.
-
(i)
The initial condition (130) holds;
-
(ii)
\(\forall t \in I\) we have \(\big (t,x(t)\big ) \in \mathcal {D}\);
-
(iii)
and the differential equation (129) is satisfied almost everywhere in I.
A lower bound on the size of the interval I is obtained by solving the inequality
where \(a,b \in \; ]0,\infty [\) are chosen so that \((t_0,x_0) \in Q_{a,b} \subset \mathcal {D}\). Observe that the function \(c \rightarrow \int _{t_0-c}^{t_0+c} m_{Q_{a,b}}(t) \, \text {d}t\) is continuous and is zero at \(c=0\). This implies that there exists at least a \(0<c\le a\) such that (131) holds. Then we have \(]t_0-c,t_0+c[ \,\subset I\) [61, p. 69].
Theorem 11
[61, p. 70 and p. 80] Assume that \(F:\mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathbb {R}^{n}\) satisfies the Carathéodory conditions on the domain \(\mathcal {D}\). Let x be a solution of the differential equation (129)–(130) defined on some interval I. Then x may be extended as a solution of (129)–(130) to a maximal interval of existence \(]\omega _-,\omega _+[\) and \(\big (t,x(t)\big ) \rightarrow \partial \mathcal {D}\) as \(t \rightarrow \omega _{\pm }\), where \(\partial \mathcal {D}\) is the boundary of \(\mathcal {D}\).
Theorem 12
[29, p. 5] Assume that \(F:\mathcal {D}\rightarrow \mathbb {R}^{n}\) satisfies the Carathéodory conditions on the domain \(\mathcal {D}\). Assume that there exists a function \(l \in L^1\big (J , \mathbb {R}_+ \big )\) for every finite interval \(J \subset \mathbb {R}\) which satisfies the following. For almost all \(t \in \mathbb {R}\) and \(\forall w_1,w_2 \in \mathbb {R}^{n}\) such that \( (t,w_1),(t,w_2) \in \mathcal {D}\) we have
Then in the domain \(\mathcal {D}\) there exists at most one solution to the differential equation (129)–(130).
The local Lipschitz condition (132) can be relaxed as follows [29, p. 5].
where the product is understood as the scalar product if \(F(t,w_1),F(t,w_2),w_1,w_2\) are vectors; the functions \(l_{1},l_{2} \in L^1\big (J , \mathbb {R}_+ \big )\) for every finite interval \(J \subset \mathbb {R}\), and \(w_1,w_2 \in \mathbb {R}^{n}\) are such that \( (t,w_1),(t,w_2) \in \mathcal {D}\).
Finally we provide a result we could not find in the literature, and which is useful to the present paper.
Lemma 12
Suppose that the application \(F:\mathbb {R} \times \mathbb {R} \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) satisfies the Carathéodory conditions on the domain \(\mathbb {R}^2\). Assume that there exists \(k \in [0,\infty [\) such that
Then the differential equation (129)–(130) has exactly one solution defined on \([t_0,\infty [\).
Proof
From Theorems 10, 11, and 12 it follows that there exists a unique solution x to the differential equation (129)–(130) defined on a maximal interval of existence \([t_0,\omega _+[\) where \(\omega _+ \in \; ]t_0,\infty ]\). Assume that \(\omega _+ < \infty \), and let \(w \in \mathbb {R}\) be fixed. It comes from Theorem 11 that \(\exists \, t_w \in \;]t_0,\omega _+[\) such that \(\forall t \in [t_w,\omega _+[\) we have \(|x(t)|> |w|\). Consider the case \(\forall t \in [t_w,\omega _+[,\,x(t)> |w| \ge w\) (a similar proof holds for the case \(\forall t \in [t_w,\omega _+[,\,x(t) <- |w|\)). Then Inequality (135) leads to
Integrating both sides of (136) on the time interval \([t_w,t]\) it follows that
Using Gronwall’s lemma [32, p. 24] it comes from Inequality (137) that
Inequality (138) contradicts the fact that \(|x(t)| \rightarrow \infty \) as \(t \rightarrow \omega _+\).
Proof of Lemma 13
Lemma 13
Let \(u \in W^{1,\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R})\) be non constant. There exists a unique function \(v_{u}\in L^{\infty }\left( I_{u},\mathbb {R}\right) \) that is defined by \(v_{u}\circ \rho _{u}=\dot{u}\). Moreover, \(\Vert v_u\Vert _{I_u} \le \Vert \dot{u}\Vert \) and \(v_{u}\) is nonzero almost everywhere on \(I_u\).
Proof
The operator \(\Delta _-\) defined in Section 11.2 is causal and satisfies Assumption 3. Using Lemma 3 it follows that \(v_{u}\in L^{\infty }\left( I_{u},\mathbb {R}\right) \) and \(\Vert v_u\Vert _{I_u} \le \Vert \dot{u}\Vert \). Now, define the following sets:
Since \(\rho _u\) is absolutely continuous on \(\mathbb {R}_+\), we get from [45, Corollary 3.41] that \(\mu (B_1)=0\). Since \(\dot{u}\in L^{\infty }\left( \mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}\right) \) we get from [45, Lemma 3.31] that \(\dot{\rho }_u = |\dot{u}|\) almost everywhere on \(\mathbb {R}_+\), which implies that \(\mu (B_2)=0\). Also, from [45, Corollary 3.14] it follows that \(\mu \big (\rho _u(C)\big )=0.\) Since \(\rho _u\) is absolutely continuous on \(\mathbb {R}_+\), and since \(\mu (B_1)=\mu (B_2)=0\) it follows from [45, Corollary 3.41] that \(\mu \big (\rho _u(B_1)\big )=\mu \big (\rho _u(B_2)\big )=0\). Now, observe that \(B \subset C \cup B_1 \cup B_2\), thus \(\rho _u(B) \subset \rho _u(C) \cup \rho _u(B_1) \cup \rho _u(B_2)\) which implies that \(\mu \big (\rho _u(B)\big )=0\). Since \(A=\rho _u(B)\) it follows that \(\mu (A)=0\).
Proof of Theorem 8
We get from Equation (68) that \(\exists \delta _1>0\) such that \(\forall w \in (0,\delta _1)\) we have \(\left| \bar{g}_1(w)-1\right| <\frac{1}{2}\), and \(\exists \delta _2>0\) such that \(\forall w \in ( -\delta _2,0)\) we have \(\left| \bar{g}_2(w)+1\right| <\frac{1}{2}\). Define
Observe that \(0<\gamma _0<\infty \) since \(u \in \Lambda _{u_{\min },u_{\max },\alpha _1,T}\). Let \(\gamma \in \; ]\gamma _0,\infty [\) be fixed, and define \(x_\gamma = \mathcal {H}_s(u \circ s_\gamma ,x_{0})\). From Equations (63) and (64) we get
where \(u_\gamma = u \circ s_\gamma \). Consider the change of variable \(\tau ^\prime = \frac{\tau }{\gamma }\), then
Define \(\sigma =\frac{t}{\gamma }\) and \(z:\mathbb {R}_+ \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) by \(z(\sigma )=x_\gamma (\gamma \sigma ), \forall \sigma \in \mathbb {R}_+\); then
For any \(m \in \mathbb {N}\) define \(z_{m}:[0,T] \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) by
The objective of the following analysis is to show that the sequence \(\{z_m\}_{m \in \mathbb {N}}\) converges in the Banach space \(C^0\left( [0,T],\mathbb {R}\right) \) endowed with the norm \(\Vert \cdot \Vert _{[0,T]}\). To this end, we prove that \(\{z_m\}_{m \in \mathbb {N}}\) is a Cauchy sequence. For any \(m_1,m_2 \in \mathbb {N}\) define
Owing to the T–periodicity of both u and \(\dot{u}\) it follows from Equations (142)–(144) that
Let \(\sigma \in (0,\alpha _1)\) then \(\dot{u}(\sigma ) \ge 0\) since \(u \in \Lambda _{u_{\min },u_{\max },\alpha _1,T}\). We study two cases: \(\dot{u}(\sigma )> 0\) and \(\dot{u}(\sigma ) = 0\).
Case \(\dot{u}(\sigma )> 0\). Since \(0<\frac{\dot{u}(\sigma )}{\gamma }< \frac{\Vert \dot{u}\Vert }{\gamma _0}\le \delta _1\) it follows that \(\left| \bar{g}_1\left( \frac{\dot{u}(\sigma )}{\gamma }\right) -1\right| <\frac{1}{2}\) which, using Equation (66), leads to
Case \(\dot{u}(\sigma ) = 0\). In this case, Inequality (146) holds by definition of the function \(g_1\). That is we have
Similarly, it can be shown that
Now, define the function \(V:[0,T] \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) by
Then, V is continuous on [0, T] and is \(C^1\) on \(]0,\alpha _1[\;\cup \; ]\alpha _1,T[\). From Eq. (145) we obtain
Combining Eqs. (150), (147) and (148) it follows that
Define the continuous function \(W:[0,\alpha _1] \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) as being the solution of the following differential equation
Using the Comparison Lemma [42, p. 102] it comes from Eqs. (151), (153), (154), and (155) that
Using a similar argument on the interval \([\alpha _1,T]\) it follows that
As a conclusion, we have proved that
Note that (160) is due to the inequality \(\dot{V}(\sigma ) \le 0\), \(\forall \sigma \in \;]0,\alpha _1[\;\cup \;]\alpha _1,T[\) b‘ecause of Inequalities (151)–(152).
Combining Eqs. (158), (149), (144), and (143) we get
An argument by induction shows that from (161) we get
Observe that, owing to Theorem 5, we have \(\Vert z\Vert <\infty \). Hence, from Eqs. (162), (160), (149), (144), and (159) it comes that \(\{z_m\}_{m \in \mathbb {N}}\) is a Cauchy sequence. Therefore there exists \(z_{\infty } \in C^0\left( [0,T],\mathbb {R}\right) \) such that \(\lim _{m \rightarrow \infty } \Vert z_m - z_{\infty }\Vert _{[0,T]}=0\). Thus we get \(\lim _{m \rightarrow \infty }\left| z_m(0)-z_{\infty }(0)\right| =0\) and
\(\lim _{m \rightarrow \infty } \left| z_m(T)-z_{\infty }(T)\right| =0\). Note that \(z_m(0)=z(mT)\) and \(z_m(T)=z\big ( (m+1)T \big )\) by (143). Take \(m_1=m\) and \(m_2=m+1\) in Inequality (162). Then we get \(\lim _{m \rightarrow \infty } \left| z(mT)-z\big ( (m+1)T \big )\right| =0\). All these facts show that we have
Combining Eqs. (142) and (143) it comes that
Note that \(\Vert z_m\Vert \le \Vert z\Vert < \infty \). Also, \(\left| \frac{\dot{u}(\tau )}{\gamma } \right| \le \frac{\Vert \dot{u}\Vert }{\gamma _0}\) so that, by the continuity of the functions \(g_1\) and \(g_2\) we have \(\left| g_1\left( \frac{\dot{u}(\tau )}{\gamma }\right) \right| \le k_1\) and \(\left| g_2\left( \frac{\dot{u}(\tau )}{\gamma }\right) \right| \le k_2\), where \(k_1, k_2 \in \mathbb {R}_+\) are independent of \(\tau \) and m. This means that the term under the integral in Eq. (164) is bounded by a constant independent of \(\tau \) and m. Using the Lebesgue Dominated Convergence Theorem it follows from (164) that
Define \(\bar{z}_\gamma :\mathbb {R}_+ \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) by
Then it comes from Eqs. (166), (165) and (163) that \(\bar{z}_\gamma \) is T–periodic and
As a conclusion, we have proved that there exists
such that
is \(T \gamma \)–periodic.
To prove the uniqueness of \(x_{0,\gamma }\) we use an argument similar to the one used for the proof of the existence. Take \(\gamma> \gamma _0\) and suppose that there exists \(x^\prime _{0,\gamma }\) such that \( \mathcal {H}_s(u \circ s_\gamma ,x^\prime _{0,\gamma })\) is \(T \gamma \)–periodic. Define \(\bar{z}_\gamma ^\prime : \mathbb {R}_+ \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) by \(\bar{z}_\gamma ^\prime =\mathcal {H}_s(u \circ s_\gamma ,x^\prime _{0,\gamma }) \circ s_{\frac{1}{\gamma }}\). Then, \(\bar{z}_\gamma ^\prime (0)=x^\prime _{0,\gamma }\) and \(\bar{z}_\gamma ^\prime \) satisfies Eq. (167) with \(\bar{z}_\gamma \) replaced by \(\bar{z}_\gamma ^\prime \). Considering the difference \(\varepsilon =\bar{z}_\gamma -\bar{z}_\gamma ^\prime \) it follows that \(\varepsilon \) satisfies Eq. (145) with \(z_{m_1,m_2}\) replaced by \(\varepsilon \). A function V can be defined as in Eq. (149) with \(z_{m_1,m_2}\) replaced by \(\varepsilon \) which leads to Inequality (158). Since \(V(0)=V(T)\) owing to the T–periodicity of V, it follows that \(V(0)=0\) as V is nonnegative. Thus \(x^\prime _{0,\gamma }=x_{0,\gamma }\).
Proof of Theorem 9
Let \(\gamma \in \;]\gamma _0,\infty [\) where \(\gamma _0\) is given by Eq. (139). From Eq. (147) it follows that
and
Also, From Eq. (148) it follows that
and
Equations (170)–(173) show that we can apply the Lebesgue Dominated Convergence Theorem in (103) so that we get
Observe that using the same theorem we can show that \(\forall \sigma \in [0,T]\) we have \(\lim _{\gamma \rightarrow \infty } |\bar{z}_\gamma (\sigma )-\bar{z}(\sigma )|=0\). However, this simple convergence does not imply Theorem 9; we need to prove the uniform convergence of \(\bar{z}_\gamma \) to \(\bar{z}\) on the interval [0, T]. This is the aim of the following analysis.
Inequalities (170)–(173) along with Eqs. (99), (101) and (102) lead to
where \(c_1 \in \mathbb {R}_+\) is independent of \(\gamma \).
On the other hand, it can be checked that Eqs. (93), (94), (90), (104), (105) lead to
Define the function \(V:[0,T] \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) by the relation
Take \(\sigma \in \;]0,\alpha _1[\), then it comes from Eqs. (167) and (176) that
Let \(\varepsilon>0\). From Eqs. (66) and (68) it follows that \(\exists \delta _\varepsilon>0\) such that \(\forall w \in \;]0,\delta _\varepsilon [\) we have \(\left| \bar{g}_1(w)-1\right| <\frac{\varepsilon }{\Vert \dot{u}\Vert }\). Thus, \(\exists \gamma _\varepsilon =\min \left( \gamma _0,\frac{\Vert \dot{u}\Vert }{\delta _\varepsilon } \right) \) such that \(\forall \gamma> \gamma _\varepsilon \) we have
Combining Eqs. (178)–(180) along with Inequalities (175) and (147) it comes that
where \(c_2 \in \mathbb {R}_+\) is independent of \(\gamma \). Define the continuous function \(W:[0,\alpha _1] \rightarrow \mathbb {R}_+\) as the solution of the following differential equation
Using the Comparison Lemma [42, p. 102] it follows from (181)–(184) that
Equations (185), (174) and (178) show that
\(\lim _{\gamma \rightarrow \infty }\Vert V_\gamma \Vert _{[0,\alpha _1]}=0\). A similar argument on the interval \([\alpha _1,T]\) shows that \(\lim _{\gamma \rightarrow \infty }\Vert V_\gamma \Vert _{[0,T]}=0\). The uniform convergence of \(\bar{z}_\gamma \) (restricted to the interval [0, T]) to \(\bar{z}\) has thus been demonstrated, which completes the proof.
Proof of Lemma 8
(i) \(\Rightarrow \) (ii). From Eq. (80) and \(C\ne 0\) it comes that \(\forall \varrho _1,\varrho _2 \in [0,\rho _u(T)]\) we have \(\varphi _u^\circ (\varrho _1)=\varphi _u^\circ (\varrho _2) \Leftrightarrow x_u^\circ (\varrho _1) = x_u^\circ (\varrho _2)\). Condition (i) implies that \(\forall \nu \in [u_{\min },u_{\max }]\) we have \(\xi _1(\nu )=\xi _2(\nu )\). Therefore \(\forall \nu \in \;]u_{\min },u_{\max }[\) we have \(\dot{\xi }_1(\nu )=\dot{\xi }_2(\nu ).\) Thus we get from (91)–(92) that
Consider the functions \(f_1,f_2,f_3,\mathbf {0}:\;]u_{\min },u_{\max }[\; \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) defined by \(\forall \nu \in \;]u_{\min },u_{\max }[, f_1(\nu )=1,\) \(f_2(\nu )=\nu, \) \(f_3(\nu )= e^{A_1(\nu -u_{\min })},\) and \(\mathbf {0}(\nu )=0.\) Then Eq. (186) along with (93)–(94) lead to
Consider the vector space of functions \(\{p:\;]u_{\min },u_{\max }[\; \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\}\) with its usual binary operations of vector addition and scalar multiplication. Then the functions \(f_1,f_2,f_3\) are linearly independent vectors so that, owing to Eqs. (187)–(188), we must have
Simple calculations show that Eqs. (189)–(194) lead to (96)–(97).
(ii) \(\Rightarrow \) (i). It can be checked that Eqs. (96)–(97) lead to (189)–(194) so that the opertor \(\mathcal {H}_o\) has a trivial hysteresis loop with respect to all \((u,x_0) \in \Lambda _{u_{\min },u_{\max },\alpha _1,T} \times \mathbb {R}\).
Proof of Lemma 10
Using Eq. (40) the functions \(F_1,F_2: \mathbb {R}^2 \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) are given by
Then Assumption 7 holds since \(A_1 \ne A_2\). The anhysteresis function is
where (114) has been used. For every pair \((x_0,u_0) \in \mathbb {R}^2\), let \(\omega _{\Phi ,1}(\cdot ,x_0,u_0):[u_0,\infty ) \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) be the solution z of \(z(\sigma )-x_0=\int _{u_0}^{\sigma } A_1 z(\tau ) + B_1 \tau + E_1\,\text {d}\tau \), for all \(\sigma \in [u_0,\infty [\) and let \(\omega _{\Phi ,2}(\cdot ,x_0,u_0):\;]-\infty ,u_0] \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) be the solution z of \(z(\sigma )-x_0=\int _{u_0}^{\sigma } A_2 z(\tau )+B_2\tau +E_2\,\text {d}\tau \), for all \(\sigma \in \; ]-\infty ,u_0]\). Then
Equations (198)–(199) are valid since \(A_1\ne 0\) and \(A_2 \ne 0\). Define the function \(\omega _{\Phi }(\cdot ,x_0,u_0)\) by Eq. (41). Then, the intersecting function \(\Omega \) should satisfy
Define
Note that \(M_1>0\) and \(M_2<0\) owing to (114)–(116). Combining (197)–(200) and (114)–(116) it follows from the definition of function \(\Omega \) (in Sect. 8.3) that
where \(\log \) sets for the natural logarithm. The function \(\varsigma \) in Eq. (42) can be determined explicitly as
It can be checked that
The fact that Inequality (39) holds for any input \( u \in AC(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R})\) and any initial condition \(x_0 \in \mathbb {R}\) follows from Theorem 3. However, \(\varsigma \) is not nonnegative: it can be checked that for any fixed \(x_1\) we have \(\lim _{v \rightarrow \pm \infty } \varsigma (x_1,v)= -\infty \).
The aim of the following analysis is to show that \(\forall (x_1,v) \in \mathbb {R} \times \left[ \frac{1}{A_1},\frac{1}{A_2} \right] \) we have \(\varsigma (x_1,v) \ge 0\). To this end, observe that, from (114) and (206), we have
Now, fix \(v \in \left[ \frac{1}{A_1},\frac{1}{A_2} \right] \). From (203)–(204) and (114)–(116) it follows that
Suppose that there exists \(x_2 \in \;]f_{\text {an}}(v),\infty [\) such that \(\varsigma (x_2,v)<0\). Then, from (207)–(208) it follows that \(\varsigma (\cdot ,v)\) should have a minimum at \(x_3 \in \; ]f_{\text {an}}(v),\infty [\) such that \(\varsigma (x_3,v)<0\). A necessary condition for this to happen is \(\frac{\partial \varsigma }{\partial x_1}(x_3,v)=0\). It can be checked from Eq. (204) that this last equality cannot hold. A similar argument can be used for Equation (205).
Proof of Lemma 11
Observe that, for Theorem 5 to hold, it is needed that \(A_1\) and \(-A_2\) are both stable. Since \(n=1\), this condition translates into \(A_1<0\) and \(A_2>0\) so that the results of Theorems 5, 6, and 7 apply.
The proof is done in two steps. In Step 1 we consider a specific T–periodic input \(u \in W^{1,\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R})\) and an arbitrary initial condition \(x_0\). Using Theorem 7 it follows that the function \(\varphi _u^\circ \) that characterizes the hysteresis loop satisfies the differential state equation (79) and the output equation (80). The aim of Step 1 is to find the initial state \(x_u^\circ (0)\) since the latter may be different from \(x_0\). In Step 2 we use the knowledge of \(x_u^\circ (0)\) to prove that, if Assumption 8 holds, then the relations (251)–(252) hold.
Step 1. Let \(\alpha \in \;]0,1[;\) define \(\varrho _1=1\), \(\varrho _2=2-\alpha \), \(\varrho _3=3-2\alpha \), \(\varrho _4=4-2\alpha \). Note that \(0<\varrho _1<\varrho _2<\varrho _3<\varrho _4\). We consider the \(\varrho _4\)-periodic input \(u : \mathbb {R}_+ \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) defined on the interval \([0,\varrho _4]\) by
Observe that \(u(0)=0,\) \(u(\varrho _1)=1,\) \(u(\varrho _2)=\alpha, \) \(u(\varrho _3)=1,\) \(u(\varrho _4)=0,\) and that \(u \in W^{1,\infty }(\mathbb {R}_+,\mathbb {R}). \) Observe also that \(|\dot{u}(\varrho )|=1\) for almost all \(\varrho \in \mathbb {R}_+\) so that \(\rho _u\) is the identity function which gives \(\psi _u=u.\) Let \(x_0 \in \mathbb {R}\) and consider the scalar semilinear Duhem model with input u and initial condition \(x_0\) (Eqs. (63)–(65)). Since all conditions of Theorem 7 hold, we get from Equality (80) that
where \(x_u^\circ \) satisfies the differential equation (79). To find the initial condition \(x_u^\circ (0)\) we compute \(x_u^\circ (\varrho _k), k=1,\ldots ,4\) as a function of \(x_u^\circ (0)\) and we use the fact that, by Theorem 7, we have \(x_u^\circ (0)=x_u^\circ (\varrho _4).\) We start by computing \(x_u^\circ (\varrho _1)\) as a function of \(x_u^\circ (0).\) In the interval \([0,\varrho _1],\) the differential equation (79) becomes
Equation (214) can be solved explicitly and it gives
Taking into account Eq. (209) it follows that
In the interval \([\varrho _1,\varrho _2]\), the differential equation (79) becomes
Equation (218) can be solved explicitly and it gives
Taking into account Eq. (210) it follows that
In the interval \([\varrho _2,\varrho _3]\), the differential equation (79) becomes
Equation (224) can be solved explicitly and it gives
Taking into account Eq. (211) it follows that
In the interval \([\varrho _3,\varrho _4]\), the differential equation (79) becomes
Eq. (230) can be solved explicitly and it gives
Taking into account Eq. (212) it follows that
Now we use the relation \(x_u^\circ (0)=x_u^\circ (\varrho _4)\) to find \(x_u^\circ (0)\) using Eqs. (216)–(217), (220)–(223), (226)–(229) and (232)–(233). We get
Note that, since \(0<\alpha <1\), \(A_1<0\) and \(A_2>0\) it follows that \(0<e^{(2-\alpha )(-A_2+A_1)}<1\) so that the denominator in Equ. (234) is nonzero.
Step 2. By Assumption 8 it follows that \(\varphi _u^\circ (\varrho _1)=\varphi _u^\circ (\varrho _3)\). This means that \(x_u^\circ (1)=x_u^\circ (\varrho _3)\) because \(C \ne 0\). Since \(x_u^\circ (0)\) has been computed explicitly, \(x_u^\circ (1)\) and \(x_u^\circ (\varrho _3)\) are available explicitly using Eqs. (216)–(217) and (226)–(229) respectively. We get
where
Our aim in the following analysis is to find the conditions under which we have \(x_u^\circ (1)=x_u^\circ (\varrho _3)\) for all inputs u that satisfy the relations (209)–(212). This means finding the conditions under which we have \(x_u^\circ (1)=x_u^\circ (\varrho _3)\) for all \(\alpha \in \;]0,1[\). In the equality \(x_u^\circ (1)=x_u^\circ (\varrho _3)\) we multiply both terms with \(1+\beta _{55}e^{(A_2-A_1)\alpha }\) so that we get from Equalities (240)–(244) that
where
Consider the functions \(f_1,f_2,f_3,f_4,\mathbf {0}:\;]0,1[\; \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\) defined by \(\forall \alpha \in \;]0,1[, f_1(\alpha )=1\), \(f_2(\alpha )=e^{(A_2-A_1)\alpha }\), \(f_3(\alpha )=\alpha e^{-A_1\alpha }\), \(f_4(\alpha )=e^{-A_1\alpha }\), and \(\mathbf {0}(\alpha )=0\). Then Eq. (245) can be written as
Consider the vector space of functions \(\{p:\;]0,1[\; \rightarrow \mathbb {R}\}\) with its usual binary operations of vector addition and scalar multiplication. Then the functions \(f_1,f_2,f_3,f_4\) are linearly independent vectors so that, owing to Eq. (250), we have \(\beta _{71}=\beta _{72}=\beta _{73}=\beta _{74}=0\) since \(\beta _{ij}\) is independent of \(\alpha \) for all possible i and j.
We start by solving Equation \(\beta _{73}=0\). Combining Eqs. (248), (237), (243), (222), and (227) it comes that
Now we solve Equation \(\beta _{71}=0\). Combining Eqs. (251), (246), (235), (229), (233), and (217) it follows that
It can be checked that Equalities (251)–(252) imply that \(\beta _{71}=\beta _{72}=\beta _{73}=\beta _{74}=0\).
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Ikhouane, F. A Survey of the Hysteretic Duhem Model. Arch Computat Methods Eng 25, 965–1002 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11831-017-9218-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11831-017-9218-3