In the case of finite deformations, the Piola–Kirchhoff stress tensors (named for Gabrio Piola and Gustav Kirchhoff) express the stress relative to the reference configuration. This is in contrast to the Cauchy stress tensor which expresses the stress relative to the present configuration. For infinitesimal deformations and rotations, the Cauchy and Piola–Kirchhoff tensors are identical.Whereas the Cauchy stress tensor
\boldsymbol{\sigma}
\boldsymbol{P}
The first Piola–Kirchhoff stress tensor,
\boldsymbol{P}
\boldsymbol{P}=J~\boldsymbol{\sigma}~\boldsymbol{F}-T~
\boldsymbol{F}
J=\det\boldsymbol{F}
PiL=J~\sigmaik
-1 | |
~F | |
Lk |
=J~\sigmaik~\cfrac{\partialXL}{\partialxk}~
Because it relates different coordinate systems, the first Piola–Kirchhoff stress is a two-point tensor. In general, it is not symmetric. The first Piola–Kirchhoff stress is the 3D generalization of the 1D concept of engineering stress.If the material rotates without a change in stress state (rigid rotation), the components of the first Piola–Kirchhoff stress tensor will vary with material orientation.The first Piola–Kirchhoff stress is energy conjugate to the deformation gradient.It relates forces in the current configuration to areas in the reference configuration.
The second Piola–Kirchhoff stress tensor,
\boldsymbol{S}
\boldsymbol{S}=J~\boldsymbol{F}-1 ⋅ \boldsymbol{\sigma} ⋅ \boldsymbol{F}-T~.
In index notation with respect to an orthonormal basis,
SIL
-1 | |
=J~F | |
Ik |
-1 | |
~F | |
Lm |
~\sigmakm=J~\cfrac{\partialXI}{\partialxk}~\cfrac{\partialXL}{\partialxm}~\sigmakm
This tensor, a one-point tensor, is symmetric.If the material rotates without a change in stress state (rigid rotation), the components of the second Piola–Kirchhoff stress tensor remain constant, irrespective of material orientation.The second Piola–Kirchhoff stress tensor is energy conjugate to the Green–Lagrange finite strain tensor.