Fractional Calculus based Elasticity obtained from Homogenization
Keywords:
fractional calculus, homogenizationAbstract
Anomalous phenomena, such as diffusion in biological systems, scale-dependent plasticity in thin
films, and electromagnetic wave propagation in complex media, often defy explanation by conventional
theories rooted in integer-order calculus. Models based on fractional calculus have proven
effective in capturing such behaviors, yet the fractional exponents they employ are typically introduced
as empirical fitting parameters without grounding in the underlying physics. In this work, we
propose that fractional differential equations can emerge naturally through homogenization of materials
with complex microstructures, which are themselves the source of the anomalous behavior that
necessitates a fractional description. Focusing on linear elasticity, we identify precise microstructural
conditions that give rise to emergent fractional behavior. In the static regime, homogenization reveals
that the order of the fractional derivative is directly linked to the power-law exponent of the microstructure’s
autocovariance function. By connecting microscale structural variation to macroscale
material response, our study opens new avenues for designing architectured materials with tailored
anomalous properties. The implications of thiswork extend broadly across physics, biology, materials
science, and beyond.