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Mechanical Engineering in Uncertainties From Classical Approaches to Some Recent Developments


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      SCIENCES

      Mechanics, Field Director – Gilles Pijaudier-Cabot

      Numerical Methods in Mechanics, Subject Head – Sylvain Drapier

      Mechanical Engineering under Uncertainties

       From Classical Approaches to Some Recent Developments

       Coordinated by

      Christian Gogu

      First published 2021 in Great Britain and the United States by ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licenses issued by the CLA. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside these terms should be sent to the publishers at the undermentioned address:

      ISTE Ltd

      27-37 St George’s Road

      London SW19 4EU

      UK

       www.iste.co.uk

      John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      111 River Street

      Hoboken, NJ 07030

      USA

       www.wiley.com

      © ISTE Ltd 2021

      The rights of Christian Gogu to be identified as the author of this work have been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2020946721

      British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

      A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 978-1-78945-010-1

      ERC code:

      PE1 Mathematics

       PE1_13 Probability

       PE1_14 Statistics

      PE8 Products and Processes Engineering

       PE8_3 Civil engineering, architecture, maritime/hydraulic engineering, geotechnics, waste treatment

       PE8_7 Mechanical and manufacturing engineering (shaping, mounting, joining, separation)

      Foreword

       Maurice LEMAIRE

       SIGMA Clermont, Clermont-Ferrand, and Phimeca Engineering, Cournon, France

      For centuries, mechanics has been a rational science motivated by astronomers observing the solar system with remarkable predictions of ephemeris, until Henri Poincaré brought out the chaos. For their part, the builders knew that their forecasts could be thwarted by dubious or unforeseen events, of which they were protected from by the so-called safety coefficients introduced by Claude-Henri Navier.

      The 20th Century was marked by advances in materials and mechanical system behavior models, and by the considerable development of digital solutions. However, there will always be an uncertain gap (not an error) between the model and the physical reality.

      If Andrey Kolmogorov made the theory of probabilities quasi-perfect, the statistical model necessary for its implementation remains, and will remain, uncertain in mechanics, even if the big data of the 21st Century will bring much to the exploration of the Mediocristan (the life around the median), but little to that of the Extremistan (the life at borders), according to the mapping of Nassim-Nicholas Taleb.

      This paradigm shift is cultural, scientific and technological all at once. It is cultural because it involves a new way of thinking that both scientific and educational communities were unprepared for. Mechanics of materials and structures, statistics (often limited to process control) and probabilities fall under disciplinary fields independent from one another.

      It is scientific because it involves new algorithm development, recognizing the uncertain nature of models and parameters by the probability theory or other approaches. It is technological because it involves a new approach to rules, now based on probabilistic content, like the EN Eurocodes did. Finally, it involves thought on the decision: to entrust it to the probabilities in Mediocristan and to the consequences of the failures in Extremistan.

      Some visionaries became aware of the importance of variability from the beginning of the 20th Century. A reliability index concept introduced in 1949, by Rzhanitzyn in steel construction, was quickly popularized because of the need to provide answers to new situations, for example in off-shore platforms engineering, and by the development of computer tools, which is now motivating methodological works to be implemented numerically.

      Since the early 1980s, several scientific communities in the world have gradually seized the subject, bringing more arguments to the probabilistic approach and giving it a scientific consistency and operational tools exiting academic applications. Allow me to have the pleasure of pointing out that the Clermont-Ferrand team has done its part.

      Christian Gogu joined talented authors from university centers and research organizations to contribute to the Mechanics and Uncertainty French School, and I want to congratulate them.

      In this book, the reader will find a clarification of the concepts of epistemic and random, because the first requirement is to ensure that the vocabulary is not random. This book’s contents provide details about historical methods, as well as the introduction of methods that overcome their shortcomings. It addresses the issue of sensitivity factors, essential for both reliability and optimization. It sheds light on the fundamental uncertainty of the statistical model, which should be considered as fractal. It takes into account the uncertainty of the models and not only that of the parameters. It gives meaning to the notion of optimization with uncertain variables.