\documentclass[reqno]{amsart}
\usepackage{hyperref}

\AtBeginDocument{{\noindent\small
\emph{Electronic Journal of Differential Equations},
Vol. 2014 (2014), No. 257, pp. 1--21.\newline
ISSN: 1072-6691. URL: http://ejde.math.txstate.edu or http://ejde.math.unt.edu
\newline ftp ejde.math.txstate.edu}
\thanks{\copyright 2014 Texas State University - San Marcos.}
\vspace{9mm}}

\begin{document}
\title[\hfilneg EJDE-2014/257\hfil Electro-elastic contact problem]
{A quasistatic electro-elastic contact problem with normal compliance, friction
and adhesion}

\author[N. Chougui, S. Drabla \hfil EJDE-2014/257\hfilneg]
{Nadhir Chougui, Salah Drabla}  % in alphabetical order

\address{Nadhir Chougui \newline
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Sciences,
University Farhat Abbas of Setif1, Setif 19000, Algeria}
\email{chouguinadhir@yahoo.fr}

\address{Salah Drabla \newline
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Sciences,
 University Farhat Abbas of Setif1, Setif 19000, Algeria}
\email{drabla\_s@univ-setif.dz}

\thanks{Submitted July 3, 2014. Published December 10, 2014.}
\subjclass[2000]{74B20, 74H10, 74M15, 74F25, 49J40}
\keywords{Piezoelectric material; electro-elastic; frictional contact;
\hfill\break\indent Coulomb's law;  adhesion; normal compliance;
quasi-variational inequality; weak solution}

\begin{abstract}
 In this article we consider a mathematical model which describes the contact
 between a piezoelectric body and a deformable foundation. The constitutive
 law is assumed linear electro-elastic and the process is quasistatic. The
 contact is adhesive and frictional and is modelled with a version of normal
 compliance condition and the associated Coulomb's law of dry friction. The
 evolution of the bonding field is described by a first order differential
 equation. We derive a variational formulation for the model, in the form of
 a coupled system for the displacements, the electric potential and the
 bonding field. Under a smallness assumption on the coefficient of friction,
 we prove an existence result of the weak solution of the model. The proofs
 are based on arguments of time-dependent variational inequalities,
 differential equations and Banach fixed point theorem.
\end{abstract}

\maketitle
\numberwithin{equation}{section}
\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section]
\newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma}
\newtheorem{proposition}[theorem]{Proposition}
\newtheorem{remark}[theorem]{Remark}
\allowdisplaybreaks

\section{Introduction}

In this work, we study a frictional contact problem with adhesion between an
elastic piezoelectric body and a deformable obstacle.

A piezoelectric material is one that produces an electric charge when a
mechanical stress is applied (the material is squeezed or stretched).
Conversely, a mechanical deformation (the material shrinks or expands) is
produced when an electric field is applied. This kind of materials appears
usually in the industry as switches in radiotronics, electroacoustics or
measuring equipments. Piezoelectric materials for which the mechanical
properties are elastic are also called electro-elastic materials, and those
for which the mechanical properties are viscoelastic are also called
electro-viscoelastic materials. Different models have been developed to
describe the interaction between the electric and mechanical fields ( see
\cite{batra,Ikeda}, \cite{Mindlin1}-\cite{Morro}, \cite{Toupin1,Toupin2}).
General models for elastic materials with piezoelectric effect, called
electro-elastic materials, can be found in \cite{batra,Ikeda}.
 A static frictional contact problem for electric-elastic materials
was considered in \cite{Bisegna,Maceri} and a slip-dependent
frictional contact problem for electro-elastic materials was studied in
\cite{Essouf}.

Adhesion may take place between parts of the contacting surfaces. It may be
intentional, when surfaces are bonded with glue, or unintentional, as a
seizure between very clean surfaces. The adhesive contact is modelled by the
introduction of a surface internal variable, the bonding field, denoted in
this paper by $\beta $; it describes the pointwise fractional density of
active bonds on the contact surface, and sometimeas referred to as the
intensity of adhesion. Following \cite{7,8}, the bonding field
satisfies the restrictions $0\leq \beta \leq 1$; when $\beta =1$ at a point
of the contact surface, the adhesion is complete and all the bonds are
active; when $\beta =0$ all the bonds are inactive, severed, and there is no
adhesion; when $0<\beta <1$ the adhesion is partial and only a fraction
$\beta $ of the bonds is active. Basic modelling can be found in
\cite{7}--\cite{9}. Analysis of models for adhesive contact can be found
in \cite{CFSS,4} and in the monographs \cite{15,16}.
An application of the theory of adhesive contact in the medical field of
prosthetic limbs was considered in \cite{13,14}; there,
the importance of the bonding
between the bone-implant and the tissue was outlined, since debonding may
lead to decrease in the persons ability to use the artificial limb or joint.

Since frictional contact is so important in industry, there is a need to
model and predict it accurately. However, the main industrial need is to
effectively control the process of frictional contact. Currently, there is a
considerable interest in frictional contact problems involving
piezo-electric materials, see for instance \cite{Bisegna,lerguet, Essouf}.

The aim of this article is to continue the study of problems begun in
\cite{Zhor,Ouafik,Corneschi}. The novelty of the present
paper is to extend the result when the contact and friction are modelled by
a normal compliance condition and a version of Coulomb's law of dry
friction, respectively. Moreover, the adhesion is taken into account at the
interface and the material behavior is assumed to be electro-elastic.

The paper is structured as follows. In Section 2 we present the
electro-elastic contact model with normal compliance, friction and adhesion
and provide comments on the contact boundary conditions. In Section 3 we
list the assumptions on the data and derive the variational formulation. In
section 4, we present our main existence results.

\section{Problem statement}

We consider the following physical setting. An electro-elastic body occupies
a bounded domain $\Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^{d}\ (d=2,3)$ with a smooth
boundary $\partial \Omega =\Gamma $. The body is submitted to the action of
body forces of density $f_{0}$ and volume electric charges of density $q_{0}$
. It is also submitted to mechanical and electric constraints on the
boundary. To describe them, we consider a partition of $\Gamma $ into three
measurable parts $\Gamma _1$, $\Gamma _{2}$ and $\Gamma _3$ on one hand,
and a partition of $\Gamma _1\cup \Gamma _{2}$ into two open parts $\Gamma
_{a}$ and $\Gamma _{b}$, on the other hand., such that $\operatorname{meas}(\Gamma _1)>0$
, $\operatorname{meas}(\Gamma a)>0$. We assume that the body is clamped on $\Gamma _1$
and surface tractions of density $f_{2}$ act on $\Gamma _{2}$. On $\Gamma
_3$ the body is in adhesive contact with an insulator obstacle, the
so-called foundation. We also assume that the electrical potential vanishes
on $\Gamma _{a}$ and a surface electric charge of density $q_{2}$ is
prescribed on $\Gamma _{b}$. We denote by $\mathbb{S}^{d}$ the space of
second order symmetric tensors on $\mathbb{R}^{d}$ and we use
\textperiodcentered\ and $\|$\textperiodcentered $\|$\ for the inner product
and the Euclidean norm on $\mathbb{R}^{d}$ and $\mathbb{S}^{d}$,
respectively. Also, below $\nu $ represents the unit outward normal on $
\Gamma $. With these assumptions, the classical model for the process is the
following.

\subsection*{Problem $\mathcal{(P)}$.}
Find a displacement field $u:\Omega \times [ 0,T]\to \mathbb{R}^{d}$,
a stress field $\sigma :\Omega \times [ 0,T]\to \mathbb{S}^{d}$,
an electric potential $\varphi :\Omega \times [0,T]\to \mathbb{R}$,
an electric displacement field $D:\Omega \times [ 0,T]\to \mathbb{R}^{d}$
and a bonding field $\beta :\Omega \times [ 0,T]\to \mathbb{R}$
such that
\begin{gather}
\sigma  =\mathcal{F}\varepsilon (u)-\mathcal{E}^{\ast }E(\varphi ) \quad
\text{in }\Omega \times (0,T) ,  \label{2.1} \\
D =\mathcal{B}E(\varphi )+\mathcal{E\varepsilon (}u) \quad \text{in }\Omega
\times (0,T) ,  \label{2.2} \\
\operatorname{Div}\sigma +f_{0} =0 \quad \text{in }\Omega \times (0,T) ,
\label{2.3} \\
\operatorname{div}D =q_{0}\quad  \text{in }\Omega \times (0,T) ,  \label{2.4} \\
u =0 \quad \text{on }\Gamma _1\times (0,T) ,  \label{2.5} \\
\sigma \nu  =f_{2} \quad \text{on }\Gamma _{2}\times (0,T) ,
\label{2.6} \\
-\sigma _{\nu } =p_{\nu }(u_{\nu })-\gamma _{\nu }\beta ^{2}R_{\nu }(u_{\nu
}) \quad \text{on }\Gamma _3\times (0,T) ,  \label{2.7}
\end{gather}
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
\| \sigma _{\tau }+\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau }(u_{\tau
})\| \leq \mu p_{\nu }(u_{\nu }), \\
\| \sigma _{\tau }+\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau }(u_{\tau
})\| <\mu p_{\nu }(u_{\nu })\Rightarrow \dot{u}_{\tau }=0, \\
\begin{aligned}
&\| \sigma _{\tau }+\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau }(u_{\tau})\| 
=\mu p_{\nu }(u_{\nu })\\
&\Rightarrow \exists \lambda \geq 0
\text{ such that }\sigma _{\tau }+\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau }(u_{\tau
})=-\lambda \dot{u}_{\tau },
\end{aligned} 
\end{gathered}\label{2.8}
\end{equation}
on $\Gamma _3\times (0,T)$,
\begin{gather}
\dot{\beta}(t)=-[\beta (t)(\gamma _{\nu }R_{\nu }(u_{\nu }(t)){{}^{2}}
+\gamma _{\tau }\| R_{\tau }(u_{\tau }(t))\| ^{2})-\varepsilon
_{a}]_{+}\quad \text{on }\Gamma _3\times (0,T) ,  \label{2.9}
\\
\varphi  =0 \quad \text{on }\Gamma _{a}\times (0,T) ,
\label{2.10} \\
D\cdot\nu  =0 \quad \text{on }\Gamma _{b}\times (0,T) ,  \label{2.11}
\\
u(0) =u_{0} \quad \text{in }\Omega ,  \label{2.12} \\
\beta (0) =\beta _{0} \quad \text{on }\Gamma _3.  \label{2.13}
\end{gather}
We now provide some comments on equations and conditions
 \eqref{2.1}--\eqref{2.13}. Equations \eqref{2.1} and \eqref{2.2} represent
the electro-elastic
constitutive law in which $\varepsilon (u)$ denotes the linearized strain
tensor, $E(\varphi )=-\nabla \varphi $ is the electric field, where $\varphi
$ is the electric potential, $\mathcal{F}$ $=(\mathcal{F}_{ijkl})$ is a $4th$
rank tensor, called the elastic tensor and its components $\mathcal{F}
_{ijkl} $ are called coefficients of elasticity, $\mathcal{E}$ represents
the piezoelectric operator, $\mathcal{E}^{\ast }$ is its transposed, $
\mathcal{B} $ denotes the electric permittivity operator, and $
D=(D_1,\dots ,D_{d})$ is the electric displacement vector. Details on the
constitutive equations of the form \eqref{2.1} and \eqref{2.2} can be find,
for instance, in \cite{batra} and in \cite{Bisegna}. Next, equations (\eqref
{2.3} and \eqref{2.4} are the equilibrium equations for the stress and
electric-displacement fields, respectively, in which
 $\operatorname{Div}$  and  $\operatorname{div}$ denote
the divergence operator for tensor and vector valued functions,
respectively. Equations \eqref{2.5} and \eqref{2.6} represent the
displacement and traction boundary conditions. Conditions \eqref{2.10} and
\eqref{2.11} represent the electric boundary conditions. Condition \eqref{2.7}
 describes contact with normal compliance and adhesion where $u_{\nu }$ is
the normal displacement, $\sigma _{\nu }$ represents the normal stress,
$\gamma _{\nu }$ denotes a given adhesion coefficient and $R_{\nu }$ is the
truncation operator defined by
\begin{equation}
R_{\nu }(s)=\begin{cases}
L &\text{if } s<-L, \\
s & \text{if }-L\leq s\leq 0, \\
0 & \text{if } s>0,
\end{cases}  \label{2.14}
\end{equation}
where $L>0$ is the characteristic length of the bond, beyond which it does
not offer any additional traction. The introduction of operator $R_{\nu }$,
together with the operator $R_{\tau }$ defined below, is motivated by the
mathematical arguments but it is not restrictive for physical point of view,
since no restriction on the size of the parameter $L$ is made in what
follows. Thus, by choosing $L$ very large, we can assume that $R_{\nu
}(u_{\nu })=u_{\nu }$.

Here $p_{\nu }$ is a nonnegative prescribed function, called normal
compliance function. Indeed, when $u_{\nu }<0$ there is no contact and the
normal pressure vanishes. When there is contact, $u_{\nu }$ is positive and
is a measure of the interpenetration of the asperities. A commonly used
example of the normal compliance function $p_{\nu }$ is
\[
p_{\nu }(r)=c_{\nu }r_{+},
\]
where $c_{\nu }>0$ is the surface stiffness coefficient and $
r_{+}=max\{0,r\} $ denotes the positive part of $r$. We can also consider
the following truncated normal compliance function:
\[
p_{\nu }(r)=\begin{cases}
c_{\nu }r_{+} & \text{if }  r\leq \alpha , \\
c_{\nu }\alpha  & \text{if } r>\alpha ,
\end{cases}
\]
where $\alpha $ is a positive coefficient related to the wear and hardness
of the surface. In this case, the above equality means that when the
penetration exceeds $\alpha $ the obstacle offers no additional resistance
to penetration. It follows from \eqref{2.7} that the contribution of the
adhesion to the normal traction is represented by the term $\gamma _{\nu
}\beta ^{2}R_{\nu }(u_{\nu })$, but as long as $u_{\nu }$ does not exceed
the bond length $L$.

Condition \eqref{2.8} is the associated Coulomb's law of dry friction, where
$u_{\tau }$ and $\sigma _{\tau }$ denote tangential components of vector $u$
and tensor $\sigma $, respectively. Her ${\mu }$ is the coefficient of
friction and $R_{\tau }$ is the truncation operator given by
\begin{equation}
R_{\tau }(\upsilon )=\begin{cases}
\upsilon  & \text{if }\| \upsilon \| \leq L, \\
L\frac{\upsilon }{\| \upsilon \| } &\text{if }\| \upsilon \|>L.
\end{cases}  \label{2.15}
\end{equation}
This condition shows that the contribution of the adhesion to the tangential
shear on the contact surface is represented by the term
$\gamma _{\tau}\beta ^{2}R_{\tau }(u_{\tau })$, but again, only up to
the bond length $L$.

The evolution of the bonding field is governed by the differential equation
\eqref{2.9} with given positive parameters $\gamma _{\nu },\gamma _{\tau }$
and $\epsilon _{a}$. For more details about conditions
\eqref{2.7}--\eqref{2.9}, we refer the reader to \cite{15} and \cite{16}.
Here and below in this paper, a dot above a function represents the
 derivative with respect to
the time variable. We note that the adhesive process is irreversible and,
indeed, once debonding occurs bonding cannot be reestablished, since
$\dot{\beta}\leq 0.$ Finally, \eqref{2.12} and \eqref{2.13} represent the initial
conditions where $\beta _{0}$ and $u_{0}$ are given.

\section{Variational formulation and preliminaries}

In this section, we list the assumptions on the data
and derive a variational formulation for the contact problem. To this end we
need to introduce some notation and preliminary material.

We recall that the inner products and the corresponding norms on
$\mathbb{R}^{d}$ and $\mathbb{S}^{d}$ are given by
\begin{gather*}
u\cdot \upsilon =u_i\upsilon _i, \quad \| \upsilon \| =(\upsilon
\cdot \upsilon )^{\frac{1}{2}}\quad \forall u,\upsilon \in \mathbb{R}^{d},\\
\sigma \cdot \tau =\sigma _{ij}\tau _{ij},\quad
\| \tau \| =(\tau \cdot \tau )^{\frac{1}{2}}\quad \forall \sigma ,\tau
\in \mathbb{S}^{d}.
\end{gather*}

Here and everywhere in this paper, $i,j,k,l$ run from 1 to $d$, summation
over repeated indices is applied and the index that follows a comma
represents the partial derivative with respect to the corresponding
component of the spatial variable, e.g.
 $u_{i,j}=\frac{\partial u_i}{ \partial x_{j}}$.

Everywhere below, we use the classical notation for $L^{p}$ and \emph{
Sobolev} spaces associated to $\Omega $ and $\Gamma $. Moreover, we use the
notation $L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}$, $H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}$, $\mathcal{H}$ and $
\mathcal{H}_1$ for the following spaces
\begin{gather*}
L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}=\{ \upsilon =(\upsilon _i): \upsilon _i\in
L^{2}(\Omega )\},\quad
 H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}=\{\upsilon =(\upsilon _i): \upsilon _i\in H^{1}(\Omega )\},
\\
\mathcal{H}=\{\tau =(\tau _{ij}): \tau _{ij}=\tau _{ji}\in L^{2}(\Omega)\},\quad
\mathcal{H}_1=\{\tau \in \mathcal{H}: \tau _{ij,j}\in L^{2}(\Omega )\}.
\end{gather*}
The spaces $L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}$, $H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}$, $\mathcal{H}$ and
$\mathcal{H}_1$ are real Hilbert spaces endowed with the canonical
inner products
\begin{gather*}
(u,\upsilon )_{L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}}=\int_{\Omega }u\cdot \upsilon \,dx,\quad
(u,\upsilon )_{H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}}=\int_{\Omega }u\cdot \upsilon
\,dx+\int_{\Omega }\nabla u\cdot \nabla \upsilon \,dx,
\\
(\sigma ,\tau )_{\mathcal{H}}=\int_{\Omega }\sigma \cdot \tau \,dx,\quad
(\sigma ,\tau )_{\mathcal{H}_1}=\int_{\Omega }\sigma \cdot \tau
\,dx+\int_{\Omega }\operatorname{Div}\,\sigma \cdot \operatorname{Div}\,\tau \,dx,
\end{gather*}
and the associated norms $\| \cdot \| _{L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}}$,
$\|\cdot \| _{H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}}$, $\| \cdot \| _{\mathcal{H}}$ and
$\| \cdot \| _{\mathcal{H}_1}$, respectively. Here and below we use
the notation
\begin{gather*}
\nabla \upsilon =(\upsilon _{i,j}),\quad
\varepsilon (\upsilon )=(\varepsilon _{ij}(\upsilon )),\quad
\varepsilon _{ij}(\upsilon )=\frac{1}{2}(\upsilon _{i,j}+\upsilon _{j,i})\quad
\forall \upsilon \in H^{1}(\Omega )^{d},
\\
\operatorname{Div}\tau
=(\tau _{ij,j})\quad \forall \tau \in \mathcal{H}_1.
\end{gather*}
For every element $\upsilon \in H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}$. We also write
$\upsilon $ for the trace of $\upsilon $ on $\Gamma $ and we denote by
$\upsilon _{\nu}$ and $\upsilon _{\tau }$ the normal and tangential components
of $\upsilon$ on $\Gamma $ given by $\upsilon _{\nu }=\upsilon \cdot \nu $,
 $\upsilon _{\tau }=\upsilon -\upsilon _{\nu }\nu $.

Let now consider the closed subspace of $H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}$ defined by
\[
V=\{\upsilon \in H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}\ |\ \upsilon =0\ \text{on}\mathrm{\ }
\Gamma _1\}.
\]
Since $\operatorname{meas}(\Gamma _1)>0$, the following \emph{Korn's} inequality
holds
\begin{equation}
\| \varepsilon (\upsilon )\| _{\mathcal{H}}\geq c_{K}\,\| \upsilon
\| _{H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}}\text{ \ \ }\forall \upsilon \in V,  \label{3.1}
\end{equation}
where $c_{K}>0$ is a constant which depends only on $\Omega $ and $\Gamma
_1$. Over the space $V$ we consider the inner product given by
\begin{equation}
(u,\upsilon )_V=(\varepsilon (u),\varepsilon (\upsilon ))_{\mathcal{H}},
\label{3.2}
\end{equation}
and let $\| \cdot \| _V$ be the associated norm. It follows from
Korn's inequality \eqref{3.1} that $\| \cdot \|_{H^{1}(\Omega )^{d}}$
 and $\| \cdot \| _V$ are equivalent norms on $V$ and, therefore,
 $(V,\| \cdot \| _V)$ is a real Hilbert space.
Moreover, by the Sobolev trace theorem, \eqref{3.1} and \eqref{3.2},
there exists a constant $c_{0}$ depending only on the domain
$\Omega $, $\Gamma _1$ and $\Gamma _3$ such that
\begin{equation}
\| \upsilon \| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)^{d}}\leq c_{0}\| \upsilon \|
_V\quad \forall \upsilon \in V.  \label{3.3}
\end{equation}
We also introduce the  spaces
\begin{gather*}
W =\{\psi \in H^{1}(\Omega )\ |\ \psi =0\ \text{on}\ \Gamma _{a}\}, \\
\mathcal{W}_1 =\{D=(D_i)\ |\ D_i\in L^{2}(\Omega ),\ D_{i,i}\in
L^{2}(\Omega )\}.
\end{gather*}
Since $\operatorname{meas}(\Gamma _{a})>0$, the following
Friedrichs-Poincar\'{e} inequality holds
\begin{equation}
\| \nabla \psi \| _{L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}}\geq c_{F}\,\| \psi \|
_{H^{1}(\Omega )}\quad \forall \psi \in W,  \label{Fr}
\end{equation}
where $c_{F}>0$ is a constant which depends only on $\Omega $ and
$\Gamma _{a}$ and $\nabla \psi =(\psi ,_i)$. Over the space $W$, we consider the
inner product given by
\[
(\varphi ,\psi )_{W}=\int_{\Omega }\nabla \varphi \cdot \nabla \psi \,dx,
\]
and let $\| \cdot \| _{W}$ be the associated norm. It follows from
\eqref{Fr} that $\| \cdot \| _{H^{1}(\Omega )}$ and
$\| \cdot \|_{W}$ are equivalent norms on $W$ and therefore $(W,\| \cdot \| _{W})$
is a real Hilbert space. Moreover, by the Sobolev trace
theorem, there exists a constant $\tilde{c}_{0}$, depending only on $\Omega $,
 $\Gamma _{a}$ and $\Gamma _3$, such that
\begin{equation}
\| \psi \| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}\leq \tilde{c}_{0}\| \psi \| _{W}
\quad \forall \psi \in W.  \label{trace}
\end{equation}
The space $\mathcal{W}_1$ is a real Hilbert space with the inner product
\[
(D,E)_{\mathcal{W}_1}
=\int_{\Omega }D\cdot E\,dx+\int_{\Omega }\operatorname{div}D\cdot
\operatorname{div}E\,dx,
\]
and the associated norm $\| \cdot \| _{\mathcal{W}_1}$.

Finally, for every real Hilbert space $X$ we use the classical
notation for the spaces $L^{p}(0,T;X)$ and $W^{k,p}(0,T;X)$,
$1\leq p\leq \infty $, $k\geq 1$ and we also introduce the set
\[
\mathcal{Q}=\{\beta \in L^{\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _3)): 0\leq
\beta (t)\leq 1\; \forall t\in [ 0,T],\text{ a.e. on }\Gamma_3\}.
\]

In the study of  problem $\mathcal{P}$, we consider the following
assumptions on the problem data.

The elasticity operator $\mathcal{F}$, the piezoelectric operator
$\mathcal{E}$ and the electric permittivity operator $\mathcal{B}$ satisfy
the following conditions:
\begin{gather}
\parbox{10cm}{
(a) $\mathcal{F=(F}_{ijkl}):\Omega \times \mathbb{S}^{d}\to  \mathbb{S}^{d}$, \\
(b) $\mathcal{F}_{ijkl}=\mathcal{F}_{klij}=\mathcal{F}_{jikl}\in L^{\infty }(\Omega )$, \\
(c) There exists $m_{\mathcal{F}}>0$ such that
$\mathcal{F}_{ijkl}\mathcal{\varepsilon }_{ij}\varepsilon _{kl}\geq m_{\mathcal{F}
}\| \mathcal{\varepsilon }\| ^{2}$
for all $\mathcal{\varepsilon }\in \mathbb{S}^{d}$, a.e.  in $\Omega$.
}\label{3.6} \\
\parbox{10cm}{
(a) $\mathcal{E}:\Omega \times \mathbb{S}^{d}\to \mathbb{R}^{d}$, \\
(b) $\mathcal{E}(x,\tau )=(e_{ijk}(x)\tau _{jk})$ for all
$\tau=(\tau _{ij})\in \mathbb{S}^{d}$, a.e. $x\in \Omega$, \\
(c) $e_{ijk}=e_{ikj}\in L^{\infty }(\Omega )$.
}\label{3.7} \\
\parbox{10cm}{
(a) $\mathcal{B}:\Omega \times \mathbb{R}^{d}\to \mathbb{R}^{d}$, \\
(b) $\mathcal{B}(x,E)=(b_{ij}(x)E_{j})$ for all
 $E=(E_i)\in \mathbb{R}^{d}$, a.e. $x\in \Omega$, \\
(c) $b_{ij}=b_{ji}\in L^{\infty }(\Omega )$, \\
(d) There exists $m_{\mathcal{B}}>0$ such that
 $b_{ij}(x)E_iE_{j}\geq m_{\mathcal{B}}\| E\| ^{2}$
 for all $E=(E_i) \in {\mathbb{R}}^{d}$, a.e. $x\in \Omega$.
}\label{3.8}
\end{gather}

From  assumptions \eqref{3.7} and \eqref{3.8}, we deduce that the
piezoelectric operator $\mathcal{E}$ and the electric permittivity operator
$\mathcal{B}$ are linear, have measurable bounded components denoted
$e_{ijk}$ and $b_{ij}$, respectively, and moreover, $\mathcal{B}$ is symmetric and
positive definite.

Recall also that the transposed operator $\mathcal{E}^{\ast }$ is given by
$\mathcal{E}^{\ast }=(e_{ijk}^{\ast })$ where $e_{ijk}^{\ast }=e_{kij}$, and
\begin{equation}
\mathcal{E}\sigma \cdot \upsilon =\sigma \cdot \mathcal{E}^{\ast }\upsilon
\quad \forall \sigma \in \mathbb{S}^{d},\; \upsilon \in \mathbb{R}^{d}.  \label{3.9}
\end{equation}
The normal compliance function satisfies
\begin{equation}
\parbox{10cm}{
(a) $p_{\nu }:\Gamma _3\times \mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}_{+}$, \\
(b) there exists $L_{\nu }>0$ such that
$\| p_{\nu }(x,r_1)-p_{\nu }(x,r_{2})\| \leq
L_{\nu }| r_1-r_{2}|$
 for all $r_1,r_{2}\in\mathbb{R}$, a.e.
$x\in \Gamma _3$. \\
(c) $x\mapsto p_{\nu }(x,r)$
is measurable on $\Gamma _3$ for all $r\in \mathbb{R}$. \\
(d) $x\mapsto p_{\nu }(x,r)=0$ for all $r\leq 0$ a.e. $x\in \Gamma _3$.
}\label{3.10a}
\end{equation}
We also suppose that the body forces and surface tractions have the
regularity
\begin{equation}
f_{0}\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}),\quad
f_{2}\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _{2})^{d}),  \label{3.11}
\end{equation}
and the densities of electric charges satisfy
\begin{equation}
q_{0}\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Omega )),\quad
q_{2}\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _{b})).  \label{3.12}
\end{equation}
Finally, we assume that
\begin{equation}
q_{2}(t)=0\quad \text{on }\Gamma _3\; \forall t\in [ 0,T].  \label{3.13}
\end{equation}
Note that we need to impose assumption \eqref{3.13} for physical reasons;
indeed, the foundation is supposed to be insulator and therefore the
electric boundary conditions on $\Gamma _3$ do not have to change in
function of the status of the contact, are the same on the contact and on
the separation zone, and are included in the boundary condition \eqref{2.11}.

The Riesz representation theorem implies the existence of two
functions
$f:[0,T]\to V$ and $q:[0,T]\to W$ such that
\begin{gather}
(f(t),\upsilon )_V=\int_{\Omega }f_{0}(t)\cdot \upsilon \,dx+\int_{\Gamma
_{2}}f_{2}(t)\cdot \upsilon \,da,  \label{3.14} \\
(q(t),\psi )_{W}=\int_{\Omega }q_{0}(t)\psi \,dx-\int_{\Gamma
_{b}}q_{2}(t)\psi \,da,  \label{3.15}
\end{gather}
for all $\upsilon \in V$, $\psi \in W$ and $t\in [ 0,T]$. We note that
conditions \eqref{3.11} and \eqref{3.12} imply
\begin{equation}
f\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;V),\quad q\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;W).
\label{3.16}
\end{equation}
The adhesion coefficients $\gamma _{\nu }$, $\gamma _{\tau }$ and the limit
bound $\epsilon _{a}$ satisfy the conditions
\begin{equation}
\gamma _{\nu },\ \gamma _{\tau }\in L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3),\quad
\epsilon _{a}\in L^{2}(\Gamma _3),\quad \gamma _{\nu },\,\gamma
_{\tau },\,\epsilon _{a}\geq 0\quad \text{a.e. on } \Gamma _3,
\label{3.17}
\end{equation}
and the friction coefficient $\mu $ is such that
\begin{equation}
\mu \in L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3),\quad \mu (x)\geq 0\quad\text{a.e. on }
 \Gamma _3.  \label{3.18}
\end{equation}
The initial condition $\beta _{0}$ satisfies
\begin{equation}
\beta _{0}\in L^{2}(\Gamma _3),\quad 0\leq \beta _{0}\leq 1\quad
\text{a.e. on } \Gamma _3.  \label{3.19}
\end{equation}
Next, we define the adhesion functional
$j_{ad}:L^{2}(\Gamma _3)\times V\times V\to \mathbb{R}$ by
\begin{equation}
j_{ad}(\beta ,u,\upsilon )=\int_{\Gamma _3}(-\gamma _{\nu }\beta
^{2}R_{\nu }(u_{\nu })\upsilon _{\nu }+\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau
}(u_{\tau })\cdot \upsilon _{\tau }) \,da,  \label{3.20}
\end{equation}
the normal compliance functional $V\times V\to \mathbb{R}$ by
\begin{equation}
j_{nc}(u,\upsilon )=\int_{\Gamma 3}p_{\nu }(u_{\nu }(t))\upsilon
_{\nu }\,da,  \label{3.21}
\end{equation}
and the friction functional $V\times V\to \mathbb{R}$ by
\begin{equation}
j_{fr}(u,\upsilon )=\int_{\Gamma 3}\mu p_{\nu }(u_{\nu })\|
\upsilon _{\tau }\| \,da.  \label{3.22}
\end{equation}
We consider the following assumptions on the conditions initials
\begin{gather}
u_{0}\in V,  \label{3.23} \\
\begin{aligned}
&(\mathcal{F}\varepsilon (u_{0}),\varepsilon (\upsilon ))_{\mathcal{H}}
+(\mathcal{E}^{\ast }\nabla \varphi _{0},\varepsilon (\upsilon ))_{\mathcal{H}
}+j_{ad}(\beta _{0},u_{0},\upsilon )
+j_{nc}(u_{0},\upsilon )+j_{fr}(u_{0},\upsilon )\\
&\geq (f(0),\upsilon )_{V } \quad \forall \upsilon \in V,
\end{aligned}   \label{3.24} \\
(\mathcal{B}\nabla \varphi _{0},\nabla \psi)_{L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}}=(\mathcal{
E\varepsilon (}u_{0}\mathcal{)},\nabla \psi)_{L^{2}(\Omega
)^{d}}+(q(0),\psi)_{W } \quad \forall \psi \in W.  \label{3.25}
\end{gather}
By a standard procedure based on Green's formula we can derive the following
variational formulation of the contact problem \eqref{2.1}--\eqref{2.13}.


\subsection*{Problem ($\mathcal{P}^{V}$).}
Find a displacement field $u:[0,T]\to  V$,  an electric potential field
$\varphi:[0,T]\to W$ and a bonding field $\beta :[0,T]\to
L^{2}(\Gamma _3)$ such that
\begin{gather}
\begin{aligned}
&(\mathcal{F}\varepsilon (u(t)),\varepsilon (\upsilon )-\varepsilon (\dot{u}
(t)))_{\mathcal{H}}+(\mathcal{E}^{\ast }\nabla \varphi (t),\varepsilon
(\upsilon )-\varepsilon (\dot{u}(t)))_{\mathcal{H}} \\
&+j_{ad}(\beta ,u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))+j_{nc}(u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))
\\
&+j_{fr}(u(t),\upsilon )-j_{fr}(u(t),\dot{u}(t))\\
&\geq (f(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))_V \quad
\forall \upsilon \in V\text{ a.e. }t\in [ 0,T] ,
\end{aligned}  \label{3.26}
\\
\begin{aligned}
&(\mathcal{B}\nabla \varphi (t),\nabla \psi )_{L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}}-(\mathcal{E
}\varepsilon (u(t)),\nabla \psi )_{L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}}\\
&=(q(t),\psi )_{W}\quad \forall \psi \in W\text{ a.e. }t\in [ 0,T] , 
\end{aligned} \label{3.27}
\\
\dot{\beta}(t)=-[\beta (t)\big(\gamma _{\nu }R_{\nu }(u_{\nu }(t))^2
+\gamma _{\tau }\| R_{\tau }(u_{\tau }(t))\| ^{2}\big)-\varepsilon
_{a}]_{+}\quad \text{on }\Gamma _3\times (0,T) ,  \label{3.28}
\\
u(0)=u_{0},\quad \beta (0)=\beta _{0}.  \label{3.29}
\end{gather}

In the rest of this section, we derive some inequalities involving the
functionals $j_{ad}$, $j_{nc}$ and $j_{fr}$ which will be used in the
following sections. Below in this section $\beta _1$ and $\beta _{2}$
denote elements of $L^{2}(\Gamma _3)$ such that $0\leq \,\beta
_1,\,\beta _{2}\leq 1$ a.e. on $\Gamma _3$, $u_1$, $u_{2},\upsilon
_1,\upsilon _{2}$, $u$ and $\upsilon $ represent elements of $V$ and $c$
is a generic positive constants which may depend on $\Omega $, $\Gamma _1$
, $\Gamma _3$, $p_{\nu }$, $\gamma _{\nu }$, $\gamma _{\tau }$ and $L$,
whose value may change from place to place. For the sake of simplicity, we
suppress in what follows the explicit dependence on various functions on $
x\in \Omega \cup \Gamma _3$. Using \eqref{3.3}, \eqref{3.10a}, \eqref{3.20}
, \eqref{3.21} and the inequalities $|R_{\nu }(u_{\nu })|\leq L,\ \|
R_{\tau }(u_{\tau })\| \leq L$, $|\beta _1|\leq 1,\ |\beta _{2}|\leq 1$,
we obtain
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&| j_{ad}(\beta _1,u_1,\omega )-j_{ad}(\beta _{2},u_{2},\omega
)+j_{nc}(u_1,\omega )-j_{nc}(u_{2},\omega )| \\
&\leq c(\| \beta _1-\beta _{2}\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}+\|
u_1-u_{2}\| _V)\| \omega \| _V.
\end{aligned}  \label{3.30}
\end{equation}
Next, we use \eqref{3.22}, \eqref{3.10a} and \eqref{3.3} to obtain
\begin{gather}
j_{fr}(u,\upsilon -u)-j_{fr}(\upsilon ,\upsilon -u)
\leq c_{0}^{2}\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu }\|
u-\upsilon \| _V^{2}\quad \forall u,\upsilon \in V.
 \label{3.31} \\
\begin{aligned}
&j_{fr}(u_1,\upsilon _1)-j_{fr}(u_1,\upsilon
_{2})+j_{fr}(u_{2},\upsilon _{2})-j_{fr}(u_{2},\upsilon _1)\\
&\leq c_{0}^{2}L_{\nu }\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\|
u_1-u_{2}\| _V\| \upsilon _1-\upsilon _{2}\| _V.
\end{aligned} \label{3.32}
\end{gather}
Inequalities \eqref{3.30}--\eqref{3.32} will be used in various places
in the rest of the paper.

\section{Existence result}

Our main result which states the solvability of Problem ($\mathcal{P}^{V}$),
is the following.

\begin{theorem}\label{Th1}
Assume that \eqref{3.6}--\eqref{3.8}, \eqref{3.10a}--\eqref{3.13},
\eqref{3.17}--\eqref{3.19} and \eqref{3.23}--\eqref{3.25} hold.
 Then there exists $\mu _{0}>0$ depending
only on $\Omega ,\Gamma _1$, $\Gamma _3,\Gamma _{a}$,
$\mathcal{F}$, $\mathcal{B}$ and $\mathcal{E}$ such that, if
$(L_{\nu }+L_{\nu }\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma
_{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\nu }\|
_{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)})<\mu _{0}$,  Problem
$(\mathcal{P}^{V})$ has at least one solution
$(u,\varphi ,\beta )$. Moreover, the solution satisfies
\begin{gather}
u\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;V),  \label{4.1} \\
\varphi \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;W),  \label{4.2} \\
\beta \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _3))\cap \mathcal{Q}.  \label{4.3}
\end{gather}
\end{theorem}

A ``quintuplete'' of functions $(u,\,\sigma ,\,\varphi,\,D,\,\beta )$ which
 satisfies \eqref{2.1}, \eqref{2.2}, \eqref{3.26}--\eqref{3.29} is called a
\emph{weak solution} of the contact problem ($\mathcal{P}$).
To precise the regularity of the weak solution we note that the
constitutive relations \eqref{2.1}-\eqref{2.2}, the assumptions
\eqref{3.6}--\eqref{3.8} and the regularities \eqref{4.1}, \eqref{4.2}
show that $\sigma \in W^{1,\infty }([0,T];\mathcal{H})$,
$D\in W^{1,\infty }([0,T];L^{2}(\Omega )^{d})$. By putting
$\upsilon =\dot{u}(t)\pm \xi $,
where $\xi \in C_{0}^{\infty }(\Omega )^{d}$ in \eqref{3.26} and
$\psi \in C_{0}^{\infty }(\Omega )$ in \eqref{3.27} we obtain
\[
\operatorname{Div}\sigma \text{{}}(t)+f_{0}(t)=0,\quad
\operatorname{div}D(t)=q_{0}(t),\quad \forall t\in [ 0,T].
\]
It follows now from the regularities \eqref{3.11}, \eqref{3.12} that
$\operatorname{Div}\sigma \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Omega )^{d})$ and
$\operatorname{div}D\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Omega ))$, which shows that
\begin{gather}
\sigma \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;\mathcal{H}_1),  \label{sigma} \\
D \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;\mathcal{W}_1).  \label{D}
\end{gather}
We conclude that the weak solution $(u,\sigma ,\varphi ,D,\beta )$ of the
piezoelectric contact problem ($\mathcal{P}$) has the regularity implied in
\eqref{4.1}, \eqref{4.2}, \eqref{4.3}, \eqref{sigma} and \eqref{D}.

The proof of Theorem \ref{Th1} is carried out in several steps and is based
on the following abstract result for evolutionary variational inequalities.

Let $X$ be a real Hilbert space with the inner product
$(\cdot,\cdot )_{X}$ and the associated norm $\| \cdot \| _{X}$.

Let $a:X\times X\to  \mathbb{R}$ be a bilinear form on $X$,
 $j:X\times X\to  \mathbb{R}$,
 $f:[ 0,T]\to  X$ and $u_{0}\in X$. With these data, we consider the
following quasivariational problem:
find $u:[0,T] \to  X$ such that
\begin{gather}
\begin{aligned}
&a(u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))+j(u(t),\upsilon )-j(u(t),\dot{u}(t))\\
&\geq (f(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))_{X} \quad
\forall \upsilon \in X,\text{ a.e. }t\in (0,T),
\end{aligned}\label{4.6}
\\
u(0)=u_{0}.  \label{4.7}
\end{gather}
To solve  problem \eqref{4.6}--\eqref{4.7}, we consider the
following assumptions:
\begin{gather}
\parbox{10cm}{
$a:X\times X\to  \mathbb{R}$  is a bilinear symmetric form, and\\
(a)  there exists $M>0$ such that
$|a(u,\upsilon )|\leq M\| u\| _{X}\| \upsilon \| _{X}$  for all
$u,\upsilon \in X$, \\
(b) there exists $m>0$ such that
$a(\upsilon ,\upsilon )\geq m\| \upsilon \| _{X}^{2}$
 for all $\upsilon \in X$.
}  \label{4.8}
\\
\parbox{10cm}{
For every $\zeta \in X$, $j(\zeta ,.):X\to  \mathbb{R}$
 is a positively homogeneous subadditive functional, i.e. \\
(a) $j(\zeta ,\lambda u)=\lambda j(\zeta ,u)$ for all $u\in X,\;
\lambda \in \mathbb{R}_{+}$, \\
(b) $j(\zeta ,u+\upsilon )\leq j(\zeta ,u)+j(\zeta ,\upsilon )$
 for all $u,\upsilon \in X$,
}  \label{4.9}
\\
f\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;X),  \label{4.10}\\
u_{0}\in X.  \label{4.11} \\
a(u_{0},\upsilon )+j(u_{0},\upsilon )\geq (f(0),\upsilon )_{X\text{ }}\quad
\forall \upsilon \in X. \label{4.12}
\end{gather}
Keeping in mind \eqref{4.9}, it results that for all $\zeta \in X$,
$j(\zeta ,.):X\to  \mathbb{R}$ is a convex functional. Therefore, there
exists the directional derivative $j_{2}'$ given by
\begin{equation}
j_{2}'(\zeta ,u;\upsilon )=\lim_{\lambda \searrow 0}
\frac{1}{\lambda }[ j(\zeta ,u+\lambda \upsilon )-j(\zeta ,u)\text{ }
] \quad \forall \zeta , u,\upsilon \in X.
\label{4.13}
\end{equation}

We consider now the following additional assumptions on the functional $j$.

For every sequence $(u_{n}) \subset X$ with
$\|u_{n}\| _{X}\to$, every sequence
$(t_{n}) \subset [ 0,1]$ and each
$\bar{u}\in X$ one has 
\begin{equation}
\liminf_{n\to +\infty }[ \frac{1}{\| u_{n}\|
_{X}^{2}}j_{2}'(t_{n}u_{n},u_{n}-\bar{u};-u_{n})] <m.
 \label{4.14}
\end{equation}

For every sequence $(u_{n}) \subset X$ with
$\|u_{n}\| _{X}\to  \infty$, every
bounded sequence $(\zeta _{n}) \subset X$ and for each
$\bar{u}\in X$, one has 
\begin{equation}
\liminf_{n\to +\infty }[ \frac{1}{\| u_{n}\|
_{X}^{2}}j_{2}'(\zeta _{n},u_{n}-\bar{u};-u_{n})] <m.
\label{4.15}
\end{equation}

For all sequences $(u_{n}) \subset X$  and
$(\zeta _{n}) \subset X$ such that
$u_{n}\rightharpoonup u\in X$, $\zeta _{n}\rightharpoonup \zeta \in X$
and for every $\upsilon \in X$, we have
\begin{equation}
\limsup_{n\to +\infty } [ j(\zeta _{n},\upsilon
)-j(\zeta _{n},u_{n})] \leq j(\zeta ,\upsilon )-j(\zeta ,u).
\label{4.16}
\end{equation}

There exists $k_{0}\in (0,m)$ such that
\begin{equation}
j(u,\upsilon -u)-j(\upsilon ,\upsilon -u)\leq k_{0}\| u-\upsilon
\| _{X}^{2}\quad \forall u,\upsilon \in X.  \label{4.17}
\end{equation}

There exist two functions $a_1:X\to  \mathbb{R}$
and $a_{2}:X\to  \mathbb{R}$, 
which map bounded sets in $X$ into bounded sets in $\mathbb{R}$
 such that 
\begin{equation}
| j(\zeta ,u)| \leq a_1(\zeta)\| u\| _{X}^{2}+a_{2}(\zeta )\quad
\forall \zeta,u\in X,\text{ and }a_1(0_{X})<m-k_{0}. \label{4.18}
\end{equation}

For every sequence $(\zeta _{n}) \subset X$  with
$\zeta _{n}\rightharpoonup \zeta \in X$  and every
bounded sequence $(u_{n}) \subset X$  one has  
\begin{equation}
\lim_{n\to +\infty } [ j(\zeta _{n},u_{n})-j(\zeta,u_{n})] =0. \label{4.19}
\end{equation}

For every $s\in (0,T]$ and every pair of functions
$u,\upsilon \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;X)$, with
$u(0)=\upsilon (0)$, $u(s)\neq \upsilon (s)$,
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&\int_{0}^{s}[j(u(t),\dot{\upsilon}(t))-j(u(t),\dot{u}(t))+j(\upsilon (t),
\dot{u}(t)) -j(\upsilon (t),\dot{\upsilon}(t))]dt\\
&<\frac{m}{2}\| u(s)-\upsilon (s)\| _{X}^{2}.
\end{aligned}\label{4.20}
\end{equation}

There exists $\alpha \in (0,\frac{m}{2})$
such that for every $s\in (0,T]$
and for every functions $u,\upsilon \in W^{1,\infty}(0,T;X)$
with $u(s)\neq \upsilon (s)$, it holds that
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&\int_{0}^{s}[j(u(t),\dot{\upsilon}(t))-j(u(t),\dot{u}(t))+j(\upsilon (t),
\dot{u}(t))
-j(\upsilon (t),\dot{\upsilon}(t))]dt\\
&<\alpha \| u(s)-\upsilon (s)\|_{X}^{2}.
\end{aligned}\label{4.21}
\end{equation}

For the study of the evolutionary problem \eqref{4.6}--\eqref{4.7}, we recall
the following result.

\begin{theorem} \label{Th2}
Assume \eqref{4.8}--\eqref{4.12} hold.

(i) If  assumptions \eqref{4.14}--\eqref{4.19} are satisfied,
  then there exists at least a solution
$u\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;X)$ to  problem \eqref{4.6}--\eqref{4.7}.

(ii) If  assumptions \eqref{4.14}--\eqref{4.20}
are satisfied. then there exists a unique solution
$u\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;X)$ to  problem \eqref{4.6}--\eqref{4.7}.

(iii) If assumptions \eqref{4.14}--\eqref{4.19}
 and \eqref{4.21} are satisfied, then there exists a unique solution
$u\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;X)$ to \eqref{4.6}--\eqref{4.7},
 and the mapping $(f,u_{0})\to \mathbb{R}$  is
Lipschitz continuous from $W^{1,\infty}(0,T;X)\times X$ to
 $L^{\infty }(0,T;X)$.
\end{theorem}

The proof can be find in \cite{Motreanu}, it is obtained in several steps
and it is based on arguments of elliptic quasivariational inequalities and a
time discretization method.

We return now to proof of theorem \ref{Th1}. To this end, we assume in the
following that \eqref{3.6}--\eqref{3.8}, \eqref{3.10a}--\eqref{3.13},
\eqref{3.17}--\eqref{3.19} and \eqref{3.23}--\eqref{3.25} hold.
Below, $c$ is a generic positive constants which may depend on $\Omega $,
$\Gamma _1$, $\Gamma _3$, $\mathcal{F}$, $p_{\nu }$, $\gamma _{\nu }$,
$\gamma _{\tau }$ and $L$, whose value may change from place to place. For
the sake of simplicity, we suppress in what follows the explicit dependence
on various functions on $x\in \Omega \cup \Gamma _3$.

Using the Riesz's representation theorem, we define the
 operators $\mathcal{G}:W\to  W$ and $\mathcal{R}:V\to  W$  respectively by
\begin{gather}
(\mathcal{G}\varphi (t),\psi )_{W}=(\mathcal{B}\nabla \varphi (t),\nabla
\psi )_{L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}}\quad \forall \varphi ,\psi \in W,
\label{4.22} \\
(\mathcal{R}\upsilon ,\varphi )_{W}=(\mathcal{E}\varepsilon (\upsilon
),\nabla \varphi )_{L^{2}(\Omega )^{d}}\quad \forall \varphi \in W,
\upsilon \in V.  \label{4.23}
\end{gather}
We can show that $\mathcal{G}$ is a linear continuous symmetric positive
definite operator. Therefore, $\mathcal{G}$ is an invertible operator on $W$.
We can also prove that $\mathcal{R}$ is a linear continuous operator on $V$.
Let $\mathcal{R}^{\ast }$ the adjoint of $\mathcal{R}$. Thus, from
\eqref{3.9} we can write
\begin{equation}
(\mathcal{R}^{\ast }\varphi ,\upsilon )_V=(\mathcal{E}^{\ast }\nabla
\varphi ,\varepsilon (\upsilon ))_{\mathcal{H}}\quad \forall \varphi
\in W,\text{ }\upsilon \in V.  \label{4.24}
\end{equation}
By introducing \eqref{4.22}--\eqref{4.23} in \eqref{3.27} we obtain
\[
(\mathcal{G}\varphi (t),\psi )_{W}=(\mathcal{R}u(t),\psi )_{W}+(q(t),\psi
)_{W}\quad \forall \psi \in W,
\]
and consequently
\[
\mathcal{G}\varphi (t)=\mathcal{R}u(t)+q(t).
\]
On the other hand, $\mathcal{G}$ is invertible where the previous equality
gives us
\begin{equation}
\varphi (t)=\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}u(t)+\mathcal{G}^{-1}q(t).
\label{4.25}
\end{equation}
Using \eqref{4.24}--\eqref{4.25} and \eqref{3.26} we obtain
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&(\mathcal{F}\varepsilon (u(t)),\varepsilon (\upsilon )-\varepsilon (\dot{u}
(t)))_{\mathcal{H}}+(\mathcal{R}^{\ast }\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}
u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))_V \\
&+j_{ad}(\beta ,u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))+j_{nc}(u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))
+j_{fr}(u(t),\upsilon )-j_{fr}(u(t),\dot{u}(t))\\
&\geq (f(t)-\mathcal{R}^{\ast }
\mathcal{G}^{-1}q(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))_V
\quad \forall \upsilon \in V,\text{ a.e. } t\in (0,T).
\end{aligned}
 \label{4.26}
\end{equation}
Let now the operator $L:V\to V$ defined by
\begin{equation}
L(\upsilon )=\mathcal{R}^{\ast }\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}(\upsilon ),\text{
}\forall \upsilon \in V.  \label{4.27}
\end{equation}
Using the properties of the operators $\mathcal{G}$, $\mathcal{R}$ and $
\mathcal{R}^{\ast }$, we deduce that $L$ is a linear symmetric positive
operator on $V$. Indeed, we have
\begin{align*}
(Lu,\upsilon )_V
& =(\mathcal{R}^{\ast }\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}
u,\upsilon )_V \\
& =(\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}u,\mathcal{R}\upsilon )_{W} \\
& =(\mathcal{R}u,\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}\upsilon )_{W} \\
& =(u,\mathcal{R}^{\ast }\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}\upsilon )_V \\
& =(u,L\upsilon )_V\text{ }\forall u,\upsilon \in V
\end{align*}
\[
(L\upsilon ,\upsilon )_V =(\mathcal{R}^{\ast }\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}
\upsilon ,\upsilon )_V,
\]
\begin{equation}
(L\upsilon ,\upsilon )_V=(\mathcal{G}^{-1}\mathcal{R}\upsilon ,\mathcal{R}
\upsilon )_{W}\geq 0\text{\ \ }\forall \upsilon \in V.  \label{4.28}
\end{equation}
Now, let the bilinear form $a:V\times V\to \mathbb{R}$ be such that
\begin{equation}
a(u,\upsilon )=(\mathcal{F}\varepsilon (u(t)),\varepsilon (\upsilon ))_{
\mathcal{H}}+(Lu,\upsilon )_V\text{\ \ \ }\forall u,\upsilon \in V.
\label{4.29}
\end{equation}
The bilinear form $a$ is continuous and coercive on $V$. Indeed, we have
\begin{gather}
| a(u,\upsilon )| \leq (M+\| L\| )\| u\| _V\|
\upsilon \| _V\quad \forall u,\upsilon \in V,  \label{4.30} \\
a(\upsilon ,\upsilon )\geq m\| \upsilon \| _V^{2}\quad \forall
\upsilon \in V,  \label{4.31}
\end{gather}
and the symmetry of $\mathcal{F}$ and $L$ leads to the symmetry of $a$.

Let now the function $\mathbf{f}:[0\text{ }T]\to V$ be defined by
\begin{equation}
\mathbf{f}(t)=f(t)-\mathcal{R}^{\ast }\mathcal{G}^{-1}q(t)\quad
\forall t\in [0,T] .  \label{4.32}
\end{equation}
From \eqref{3.16} we obtain
\begin{equation}
\mathbf{f}\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T,V).  \label{4.33}
\end{equation}
The relations \eqref{4.26}, \eqref{4.29}, \eqref{4.32}, \eqref{3.28} and
\eqref{3.29} lead us to consider the following variational problem, in the terms
of displacement and bonding fields.

\subsection*{Problem $\mathcal{P}_1^{V}$.}
Find a displacement field  $u:[0,T]\to  V$, and a bonding field
$\beta :[0,T]\to L^{2}(\Gamma _3)$  such that
\begin{gather}
\begin{aligned}
&a(u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t))+j_{ad}(\beta ,u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}
(t))+j_{nc}(u(t),\upsilon -\dot{u}(t)) \\
&+j_{fr}(u(t),\upsilon )-j_{fr}(u(t),\dot{u}(t))\\
&\geq (\mathbf{f}(t),\upsilon - \dot{u}(t))_V \quad
\forall \upsilon \in V,\text{ a.e. t}\in (0,T) ,
\end{aligned}  \label{4.34}
\\
\dot{\beta}(t)=-[\beta (t)(\gamma _{\nu }R_{\nu }(u_{\nu }(t))^2
+\gamma _{\tau }\| R_{\tau }(u_{\tau }(t))\| ^{2})-\varepsilon
_{a}]_{+} \quad \text{on }\Gamma _3\times (0,T) ,  \label{4.35}
\\
u(0)=u_{0},\quad \beta (0)=\beta _{0}.  \label{4.36}
\end{gather}

\begin{theorem}\label{Th3}
Assume that \eqref{3.6}--\eqref{3.8}, \eqref{3.10a}--\eqref{3.13}, 
\eqref{3.17}--\eqref{3.19}  and \eqref{3.23}--\eqref{3.25} hold.
Then, there exists $\mu _{0}>0$ depending only on $\Omega ,\Gamma _1$,
$\Gamma _3,\Gamma _{a}$, $\mathcal{F}$, $\mathcal{B}$ and
 $\mathcal{E}$ such that, if 
\[
L_{\nu }+L_{\nu }\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma
_{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\tau }\|
_{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)})<\mu _{0},
\]
then Problem $\mathcal{P}_1^{V}$  has at least one solution 
$(u,\beta )$.
Moreover, the solution satisfies
\begin{gather}
u\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;V),  \label{4.37} \\
\beta \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _3))\cap \mathcal{Q}.
\label{4.38}
\end{gather}
\end{theorem}

We assume in the following that the conditions of Theorem \ref{Th3} hold.
Let $\beta \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _3))\cap \mathcal{Q}$ be
given and $j_{\beta }:V\times V\to \mathbb{R}$ defined by
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
j_{\beta }(u,\upsilon )
&=\int_{\Gamma 3}p_{\nu }(u_{\nu }(t))\upsilon _{\nu }da
+\int_{\Gamma 3}\mu p_{\nu }(u_{\nu })\| \upsilon _{\tau }\| \,da \\
&\quad +\int_{\Gamma _3}\Big(-\gamma _{\nu }\beta
^{2}R_{\nu }(u_{\nu })\upsilon _{\nu }+\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau
}(u_{\tau })\cdot \upsilon _{\tau }\Big) \,da,
\end{aligned}  \label{4.38a}
\end{equation}
Now, we consider the following intermediate problem, in the term of
displacement field.

\subsection*{Problem $\mathcal{P}_{2}^{V}$.} 
Find the displacement field $u_{\beta }:[0,T] \to V$ such that
\begin{gather}
\begin{aligned}
&a(u_{\beta }(t),\upsilon -\dot{u_{\beta }}(t))+j_{\beta }(u_{\beta
}(t),\upsilon )-j_{\beta }(u_{\beta }(t),\dot{u_{\beta }}(t))\\
&\geq (\mathbf{f}(t),\upsilon -\dot{u_{\beta }}(t))_V\quad
 \forall \upsilon \in V,\text{ a.e. }t\in (0,T),
\end{aligned}  \label{4.39}
\\
u_{\beta }(0)=u_{0},  \label{4.40}
\end{gather}

\begin{remark}\label{Rem} \rm
From \eqref{3.24} and \eqref{3.25}, we can deduce  \eqref{4.12}.
\end{remark}

\begin{theorem}\label{Th4}
Assume that \eqref{3.6}--\eqref{3.8}, \eqref{3.10a}--\eqref{3.13}, 
\eqref{3.17}--\eqref{3.19}  and \eqref{3.23}--\eqref{3.25} hold. 
Then there exists $\mu _{0}>0$ depending only on 
$\Omega ,\Gamma _1$, $\Gamma _3,\Gamma _{a}$,  $\mathcal{F}$, $\mathcal{B}$ 
and $\mathcal{E}$ such that, if 
\[
L_{\nu }+L_{\nu }\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma
_{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\nu }\|
_{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}<\mu _{0},
\]
then Problem $\mathcal{P}_{2}^{V}$ has at least one solution 
$u_{\beta }\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T,V)$.
\end{theorem}

We will use the results given by the Theorem \ref{Th2} to give a result of
existence of solutions of problem $\mathcal{P}_{2}^{V}$. We remark that the
functional $j_{\beta }$, given by \eqref{4.38a}, satisfies condition 
\eqref{4.9}. In addition, we have the following results.

\begin{lemma}\label{Lem1}
The functional $j_{\beta }$ satisfies the
assumptions \eqref{4.14} and \eqref{4.15}.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
Let $\zeta ,u,\bar{u}\in V$ and let $\lambda \in ] 0,1] $. Using
\eqref{3.22}, it follows that $j_{\beta }$ satisfies
\begin{align*}
&j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u-\overline{u}-\lambda u)-j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u-\overline{u})\\
&\leq -\lambda \int_{\Gamma 3}p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })u_{\nu }\,da
-\lambda \int_{\Gamma 3}\mu p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })\|
u_{\tau }-\overline{u}_{\tau }\| \,da+\lambda \int_{\Gamma
3}\mu p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })\| \overline{u}_{\tau }\| \,da \\
&\quad +\lambda \int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\nu }\beta ^{2}R_{\nu }(\zeta
_{\nu })u_{\nu }\,da-\lambda \int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\tau }\beta
^{2}R_{\tau }(\zeta _{\tau })\cdot u_{\tau }\,da,
\end{align*}
and as $\mu \geq 0$, $p_{\nu }\geq 0$ a.e. on $\Gamma _3$, we obtain
\begin{align*}
&j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u-\overline{u}-\lambda u)-j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u-\overline{u})\\
&\leq -\lambda \int_{\Gamma 3}p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })u_{\nu }\,da
+ \lambda \int_{\Gamma 3}\mu p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })\|
\overline{u}_{\tau }\| \,da+\lambda \int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma
_{\nu }\beta ^{2}R_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })u_{\nu }\,da\\
&\quad - \lambda \int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau }(\zeta
_{\tau })\cdot u_{\tau }\,da,\quad \forall \zeta ,u,\bar{u}\in V.
\end{align*}
Moreover, we deduce from \eqref{4.13} that
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&j_{2}'(\zeta ,u-\overline{u};-u)\\
&\leq -\int_{\Gamma 3}p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })u_{\nu
}\,da+\int_{\Gamma 3}\mu p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })\| \overline{u}
_{\tau }\| \,da\\
&\quad + \int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\nu }\beta ^{2}R_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu
})u_{\nu }\,da-\int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau
}(\zeta _{\tau })\cdot u_{\tau }\,da\quad \forall \zeta ,u,\bar{u}\in V.
\end{aligned}  \label{4.42}
\end{equation}
Now consider the sequences $(u_{n})_{n\in \mathbb{N}}\subset V$, 
$(t_{n})_{n\in\mathbb{N}}\subset [ 0\text{ }1] $ and the element 
$\overline{u}\in V$.
Using \eqref{3.3}, \eqref{3.10a}, \eqref{3.18} and \eqref{4.42}, we find
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&j_{2}'(t_{n}u_{n},u_{n}-\overline{u};-u_{n})\\
&\leq -\int_{\Gamma 3}p_{\nu }(t_{n}u_{n\nu })u_{n\nu
}+\int_{\Gamma 3}\mu p_{\nu }(t_{n}u_{n\nu })\| \overline{u}
_{\tau }\|\, da \\
&\quad +\int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\nu }\beta ^{2}R_{\nu }(t_{n}u_{n\nu
})u_{n\nu }\,da-\int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau
}(t_{n}u_{n\tau })\cdot u_{n\tau }\,da\quad \forall \zeta ,u,\bar{u}\in
V
\end{aligned} \label{4.42a}
\end{equation}
Keeping in mind that $0\leq \beta \leq 1$ a.e. on $\Gamma _3$ and using 
\eqref{3.10a}, \eqref{2.15} and \eqref{3.17} we obtain 
$p_{\nu }(t_{n}u_{n\nu })u_{n\nu }\geq 0$  and 
$\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}R_{\tau }(t_{n}u_{n\tau
})\cdot u_{\tau }\geq 0$ p.p. on $\Gamma _3$. So \eqref{4.42a} implies
\[
 j_{2}'(t_{n}u_{n},u_{n}-\overline{u};-u_{n})\leq
\int_{\Gamma 3}\mu p_{\nu }(t_{n}u_{n\nu })\| \overline{u}
_{\tau }\| \,da+\int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\nu }\beta ^{2}R_{\nu
}(t_{n}u_{n\nu })u_{n\nu }\,da.
\]
Now, using \eqref{3.10a}(b), \eqref{3.3} and the fact that 
$|R_{\nu}(t_{n}u_{n\nu })|\leq L$ we obtain
\begin{align*}
&j_{2}'(t_{n}u_{n},u_{n}-\overline{u};-u_{n})\\
&\leq \| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu }\int_{\Gamma 3}|
u_{n\nu }| \| \overline{u}_{\tau }\| \,da
 + L\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma
_3)}\int_{\Gamma 3}| u_{n\nu }| \,da \\
&\leq c_{0}^{2}\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu
}\| u_{n}\| _V\| \overline{u}\| _V
+c_{0}L\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\operatorname{meas}(\Gamma
_3)\| u_{n}\| _V.
\end{align*}
It follows from the previous inequality that if 
$\| u_{n}\|_V\to  +\infty $, then
\[
 \liminf_{n\to  +\infty } \Big[ \frac{1}{\|
u_{n}\| _V^{2}}j_{2}'(t_{n}u_{n},u_{n}-\overline{u};-u_{n})
\Big] \leq 0,
\]
and we conclude that $j_{\beta }$ satisfies assumption \eqref{4.14}.

Now consider the sequences $(u_{n})_{n\in \mathbb{N}}\subset V$, 
$(\zeta _{n})_{n\in\mathbb{N}}\subset V$ such that
\begin{gather}
\| u_{n}\| _V\to  +\infty ,  \label{4.43} \\
\| \zeta _{n}\| _V\leq C\quad \forall n\in \mathbb{N},  \label{4.44}
\end{gather}
where $C>0$. Let $\overline{u}\in V$. Using \eqref{3.3}, \eqref{3.10a}, 
\eqref{3.18}, \eqref{4.42} and \eqref{4.44} we obtain
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
j_{2}'(\zeta _{n},u_{n}-\overline{u};-u_{n})
&\leq c_{0}^{2}L_{\nu }\| \zeta _{n}\| _V\| u_{n}\|
_V+c_{0}^{2}\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu }\| \zeta
_{n}\| _V\| \overline{u}\| _V \\
&\quad + c_{0}L\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}
\operatorname{meas}(\Gamma_3)\| u_{n}\| _V\\
&\quad + c_{0}L\| \gamma _{\tau }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\operatorname{meas}
(\Gamma_3)\| u_{n}\| _V\quad \forall n\in \mathbb{N}.
\end{aligned} \label{4.45}
\end{equation}
From \eqref{4.43} and \eqref{4.45}, we  conclude that
\[
\liminf_{n\to  +\infty }\big[ \frac{1}{
\| u_{n}\| _V^{2}}j_{2}'(\zeta _{n},u_{n}-\overline{u}
;-u_{n})\big] \leq 0\,. 
\]
Thus, we deduce that $j_{\beta }$ satisfies \eqref{4.15}.
\end{proof}

\begin{lemma} \label{Lem2}
The functional $j_{\beta }$ satisfies the
conditions \eqref{4.16} and \eqref{4.19}.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
Let $(u_{n})_{n\in\mathbb{N}}\subset V$, $(\zeta _{n})_{n\in\mathbb{N}}\subset V$ 
be two sequences such that $u_{n}\rightharpoonup u\in V$ and
 $\zeta _{n}\rightharpoonup \zeta \in V$. Using the compactness property of
the trace map and \eqref{3.10a}, it follows that
\begin{gather}
p_{\nu }(\zeta _{n\nu })\to  p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })\quad\text{in }
L^{2}(\Gamma _3),  \label{4.46}
\\
u_{n}\to  u\quad\text{in }L^{2}(\Gamma _3)^{d}.  \label{4.47}
\\
\begin{gathered}
R_{\nu }(\zeta _{n\nu })\to  R_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })\quad\text{in }
L^{2}(\Gamma _3). \\
R_{\tau }(\zeta _{n\tau })\to  R_{\tau }(\zeta _{\tau })\quad\text{in }
L^{2}(\Gamma _3)^{d}
\end{gathered}  \label{4.47a}
\end{gather}
Therefore, we deduce from \eqref{4.46}, \eqref{4.47} and \eqref{4.47a} that
\begin{gather*}
j_{\beta }(\zeta _{n},\upsilon )\to  j_{\beta }(\zeta ,\upsilon )
\quad \forall \upsilon \in V, \\
j_{\beta }(\zeta _{n},u_{n})\to  j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u),
\end{gather*}
which show that the functional $j_{\beta }$ satisfies
\[
\limsup_{n\to  +\infty }  [ j_{\beta
}(\zeta _{n},\upsilon )-j_{\beta }(\zeta _{n},u_{n})] \leq j_{\beta
}(\zeta ,\upsilon )-j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u).
\]
Thus, we deduce that $j_{\beta }$ satisfies \eqref{4.16}.

Now we consider $(u_{n})_{n\in \mathbb{N}}$ a bounded sequence of $V$, i.e.
\begin{equation}
\| u_{n}\| _V\leq C\quad \forall n\in \mathbb{N},
\label{4.48}
\end{equation}
where $C>0$. We have
\begin{align*}
| j_{\beta }(\zeta _{n},u_{n})-j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u_{n})| 
& \leq  \int_{\Gamma 3}| p_{\nu }(\zeta _{n\nu })-p_{\nu }(\zeta
_{\nu })| | u_{n\nu }| \,da\\
&\quad +\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\int_{\Gamma
3}| p_{\nu }(\zeta _{n\nu })-\mu p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })| \|
u_{n\tau }\| \,da\\
&\quad + \| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\int_{\Gamma
_3}| R_{\nu }(\zeta _{n\nu })-R_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu }))| | u_{n\nu
}| \,da\\
&\quad +\| \gamma _{\tau }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\int_{\Gamma
_3}\| R_{\tau }(u_{n\tau })-R_{\tau }(u_{n\tau })\|
\| u_{n\tau }\| \,da,
\end{align*}
using \eqref{3.3}, we obtain
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&| j_{\beta }(\zeta _{n},u_{n})-j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u_{n})| \\
&\leq c_{0}(\| p_{\nu }(\zeta _{n\nu })-p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })\|
_{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}
+ \| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\| p_{\nu }(\zeta
_{n\nu })-p_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu })\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}\\
&\quad + \| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\| R_{\nu
}(\zeta _{n\nu })-R_{\nu }(\zeta _{\nu }))\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}\\
&\quad + \| \gamma _{\tau }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\|
R_{\tau }(u_{n\tau })-R_{\tau }(u_{n\tau })\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma
_3)})\| u_{n}\| _V,
\end{aligned} \label{4.49}
\end{equation}
Thus, from \eqref{4.46}, \eqref{4.47a}, \eqref{4.48} and \eqref{4.49}, we
 conclude that $j_{\beta }$ satisfies
\[
\lim_{n\to  +\infty } [ j_{\beta }(\zeta
_{n},u_{n})-j_{fr}(\zeta ,u_{n})] =0.
\]
So, we deduce that $j_{\beta }$ satisfies \eqref{4.19}.
\end{proof}

\begin{lemma}\label{Lem3}
The functional $j_{\beta }$ satisfies the
assumption \eqref{4.18} for all $k_{0}\in (0,m)$. Moreover,
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&j_{fr}(u,\upsilon -u)-j_{fr}(\upsilon ,\upsilon -u)\\
&\leq c_{0}^{2}(L_{\nu }+\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu
}+\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\tau
}\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}) \| u-\upsilon \|
_V^{2}
\end{aligned}  \label{4.50}
\end{equation}
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
Let $\zeta ,u\in V$. Using \eqref{3.10a}, \eqref{3.18} and \eqref{4.38a}, we
obtain
\begin{align*}
| j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u)|  
& \leq  L_{\nu }\| \zeta _{\nu
}\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}\| u_{\nu }\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma
_3)}\\
&\quad + \| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu }\| \zeta
_{\nu }\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}\| u_{\tau }\|
_{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)^{d}}\\
&\quad + \| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\| R_{\nu
}(\zeta _{\nu })\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}\| u_{\nu }\|
_{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}\\
&\quad + \| \gamma _{\tau }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}\|
R_{\tau }(\zeta _{\tau })\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)^{d}}\|
u_{\tau }\| _{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)^{d}}.
\end{align*}
Keeping in mind \eqref{3.3} and that $R_{\tau }$, $R_{\nu }$ are
Lipschitz continuous operators, we obtain
\begin{align*}
| j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u)| 
&\leq c_{0}^{2}L_{\nu }\| \zeta _{\nu }\| _V\| u\| _V
+c_{0}^{2}\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu }\|
\zeta \| _V\| u\| _V\\
&\quad + c_{0}^{2}\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma
_3)}\| \zeta \| _V\| u\| _V
+c_{0}^{2}\| \gamma _{\tau }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma
_3)}\| \zeta \| _V\| u\| _V,
\end{align*}
Finally, we obtain
\[
| j_{\beta }(\zeta ,u)| \leq c_{0}^{2}(L_{\nu }+\| \mu \|
_{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu }+\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty
}(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\tau }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma
_3)}) \| \zeta \| _V\| u\| _V
\]
which implies condition \eqref{4.18}, for all $k_{0}\in (0,m)$. 
Now let $u,\upsilon \in V$. Using again the assumptions \eqref{3.10a}, \eqref{3.18}
and \eqref{4.38a} we find
\begin{align*}
&j_{\beta }(u,\upsilon -u)-j_{\beta }(\upsilon ,\upsilon -u)\\
&=\int_{\Gamma 3}(p_{\nu }(u_{\nu })-p_{\nu }(\upsilon _{\nu
}))(\upsilon _{\nu }-u_{\nu })\,da
+\int_{\Gamma 3}\mu (p_{\nu }(u_{\nu })-p_{\nu }(\upsilon
_{\nu }))\| \upsilon _{\tau }-u_{\tau }\| \,da \\
&\quad +\int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\nu }\beta ^{2}(R_{\nu }(u_{\nu
})-R_{\nu }(\upsilon _{\nu }))(\upsilon _{\nu }-u_{\nu })\,da\\
&\quad +\int_{\Gamma 3}\gamma _{\tau }\beta ^{2}(R_{\tau }(u_{\tau
})-R_{\tau }(\upsilon _{\tau })).(\upsilon _{\tau }-u_{\tau })\,da
\end{align*}
Keeping in mind \eqref{3.10a}, \eqref{3.3} and that $R_{\tau }$, $R_{\nu }$
are Lipschitz continuous operators, we obtain
\begin{align*}
&j_{\beta }(u,\upsilon -u)-j_{\beta }(\upsilon ,\upsilon -u)\\
&\leq L_{\nu }\int_{\Gamma 3}| \upsilon _{\nu }-u_{\nu }| ^{2}\,da
+\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu
}\int_{\Gamma 3}| \upsilon _{\nu }-u_{\nu }| \|
\upsilon _{\tau }-u_{\tau }\| \,da\\
&\quad + \| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma
_3)}\int_{\Gamma 3}| \upsilon _{\nu }-u_{\nu }| ^{2}\,da
+ \| \gamma _{\tau }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma_3)}
\int_{\Gamma 3}\| \upsilon _{\tau }-u_{\tau }\|^{2}\,da
\end{align*}
It follows from the previous inequality that
\begin{align*}
&j_{fr}(u,\upsilon -u)-j_{fr}(\upsilon ,\upsilon -u)\\
&\leq c_{0}^{2}(L_{\nu }+\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu
}+\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\tau
}\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}) \| u-\upsilon \|_V^{2}
\end{align*}
which implies \eqref{4.50}.
\end{proof}

\begin{proof}[Proof of Theorem \ref{Th4}]
Using the symmetry of $\mathcal{F}$ and $L$ and \eqref{4.31}, we see that
the bilinear form $a$ defined by \eqref{4.29} is symmetric and coercive.

Let $\mu _{0}=\frac{m}{c_{0}^{2}}$. Clearly, $\mu _{0}$ depends only on 
$\Omega $, $\Gamma _1$, $\Gamma _3$, $\Gamma _{a}$, $\mathcal{F}$,
 $\mathcal{E}$ and $\mathcal{B}$. Now assume that
\[
L_{\nu }+\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu }+\| \gamma
_{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\tau }\|
_{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}<\mu _{0}.
\]
We deduce that
\[
c_{0}^{2}(L_{\nu }+\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu
}+\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\tau
}\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}) <m.
\]
Then, there exists a real $k_{0}$ such that
\[
c_{0}^{2}(L_{\nu }+\| \mu \| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}L_{\nu
}+\| \gamma _{\nu }\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}+\| \gamma _{\tau
}\| _{L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)}) \leq k_{0}<m.
\]
Using \eqref{4.50} we deduce that \eqref{4.17} is verified.
Using Lemmas \ref{Lem1}--\ref{Lem3}, \eqref{3.23}, Remark \ref{Rem} and Theorem
\ref{Th2}(i), we deduce that problem $\mathcal{P}_{2}^{V}$ has
at least one solution $u_{\beta }\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;V)$.
\end{proof}

As in \cite{c4}, we adopt the following time-discretization. 
For all $n\in \mathbf{N}^{\ast }$, we set $t_i=i\Delta t$, $0\leq i\leq n$, 
and $\Delta t=T/n$. We denote respectively by $u^i=u(t_i)$ where $u$ is 
the solution of Problem $\mathcal{P}_1^{V}$ and $\beta^i$ the approximation 
of $\beta$ at time $t_i$ and $\Delta u(t_i)=u(t_{i+1})-u(t_i)$, 
$\Delta \beta^{i}=\beta^{i+2}-\beta^i$. For a continuous function $w(t)$,
we use the notation $w^{i}=w(t_i)$. Then we obtain a sequence of time-discretized
problems $P_{n}^{i}$ of Problem $\mathcal{P}_1^{V}$ defined for $u(0)=u_0$
and $\beta^{0}=\beta_0$ by:
\smallskip

\subsection*{Problem $P_{n}^{i}$}
For $u(t_i)\in V$, $\beta ^{i}\in L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)$, find
$u(t_{i+1})\in V$, $\beta ^{i+1}\in L^{\infty }(\Gamma _3)$ such that
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
\begin{aligned}
&a(u(t_{i+1}),w-u(t_{i+1}))+j_{ad}(\beta
^{i+1},u(t_{i+1}),w-u(t_{i+1}))\\
&+j_{nc}(u(t_{i+1}),w-u(t_{i+1}))
+j_{fr}(u(t_{i+1}),w-u(t_i))-j_{fr}(u(t),\Delta u(t_i))\\
&\geq (\mathbf{f}
(t_{i+1}),w-u(t_{i+1}))_V,
\end{aligned}\\
\frac{\beta ^{i+1}-\beta ^{i}}{\Delta t}=-[\beta ^{i+1}(\gamma _{\nu
}(R_{\nu }(u_{\nu }^{i+1}))^{2}+\gamma _{\tau }(|R_{\tau }(u_{\tau
}^{i+1})|)^{2})-\varepsilon _{a}]_{+}\quad \text{a.e. on }\Gamma _3.
\end{gathered}  \label{e3.1}
\end{equation}

We have the following result.

\begin{proposition}
\label{prop3.1} There exists $\mu _{c}>0$ such that for 
$\|\mu \|_{L^{\infty}(\Gamma _3)}<\mu _{c}$, Problem $P_{n}^{i}$ has a 
unique solution.
\end{proposition}

For the proof of the above proposition, it suffices to invoke 
\cite[Proposition 4.4]{14}
In the next step, we use the displacement field $u_{\beta }$ obtained in
Theorem \ref{Th4}, let $u=u_{\beta }$ and denote by $u_{\nu }$, $u_{\tau }$
its normal and tangential components, and we consider the following initial
value problem.

\subsection*{Problem $\mathcal{P}_3^{\beta _{u}}$.}
Find a bonding field $\beta _{u}:[ 0,T] \to L^{2}(\Gamma _3)$
such that 
\begin{gather}
\dot{\beta}_{u}(t)=-[\beta _{u}(t)(\gamma _{\nu }R_{\nu }(u_{\nu }(t)){{}^{2}
}+\gamma _{\tau }\| R_{\tau }(u_{\tau }(t))\|
^{2})-\varepsilon _{a}]_{+} \quad \text{ a.e. }t\in (0,T) ,  \label{4.51} \\
\beta _{u}(0)=\beta _{0}.  \label{4.52}
\end{gather}
We obtain the following result.

\begin{lemma} \label{Lem4}
There exists a unique solution $\beta _{u}$ to
Problem $\mathcal{P}_3^{\beta _{u}}$  and it satisfies 
$\beta_{u}\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T,L^{2}(\Gamma _3))\cap \mathcal{Q}$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
Consider the mapping $F:\,[0,T]\times L^{2}(\Gamma _3)\to L^{2}(\Gamma _3)$ 
defined by
\begin{equation}
F(t,\beta _{u})=-[\beta _{u}(t)(\gamma _{\nu }R_{\nu }(u_{\nu }(t)){{}^{2}}
+\gamma _{\tau }\| R_{\tau }(u_{\tau }(t))\| ^{2})-\varepsilon
_{a}]_{+},  \label{4.53}
\end{equation}
for all $t\in [ 0,T]$ and $\beta _{u}\in L^{2}(\Gamma _3)$. It
follows from the properties of the truncation operators $R_{\nu }$ and 
$R_{\tau }$ that $F$ is Lipschitz continuous with respect to the
second argument, uniformly in time. Moreover, for any 
$\beta _{u}\in L^{2}(\Gamma _3)$, the mapping $t\mapsto F(t,\beta _{u})$
 belongs to $L^{\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _3))$. 
Using now a version of Cauchy-Lipschitz theorem, see \cite[page 48]{16},
 we obtain the existence of a unique function 
$\beta _{u}\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T,L^{2}(\Gamma_3))$ which solves 
\eqref{4.51}, \ref{4.52}. We note that the restriction
$0\leq \beta _{u}\leq 1$ is implicitly included in the Cauchy
problem $\mathcal{P}_3^{\beta _{u}}$. Indeed, \eqref{4.51} and \eqref{4.52}
 guarantee that $\beta _{u}(t)\leq \beta _{0}$ and, therefore, assumption 
\eqref{3.19} shows that $\beta _{u}(t)\leq 1$ for $t\geq 0$, a.e. on 
$\Gamma_3$. On the other hand, if $\beta _{u}(t_{0})=0$ at $t=t_{0}$, then it
follows from \eqref{4.51} and \eqref{4.52} that $\dot{\beta}_{u}(t)=0$ for
all $t\geq t_{0}$ and therefore, $\beta _{u}(t)=0$ for all $t\geq t_{0}$,
a.e. on $\Gamma _3$. We conclude that $0\leq \beta _{u}(t)\leq 1$ for all 
$t\in [ 0,T]$, a.e. on $\Gamma _3$. Therefore, from the definition of
the set $\mathcal{Q}$, we find that $\beta _{u}\in \mathcal{Q}$. Then, it
follows that $\beta _{u}\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T,L^{2}(\Gamma _3))\cap $
$\mathcal{Q}$, which concludes the proof of Lemma \ref{Lem4}.
\end{proof}

Now we introduce the sequences of functions $\beta ^n(t)$ and
$u^n(t)$ defined on $[0;T]$ by $\beta ^n(t)=\beta ^{i+1}$,
$u^n(t)=u^{i+1}=u(t_{i+1})$,
$\tilde{u}^n(t)=u^{i}+\frac{(t-t_i)}{\Delta t}\Delta u^{i}$
and $f^n(t)=f^{i+1}=$ $f(t_{i+1})$ for all $t\in ]t_i,t_{i+1}[$;
$i=0,\dots ,n-1$; and $\beta ^n(0)=\beta _{0}$, $u^n(0)=u_{0}$,
$f^n(0)=f_{0}$.

\begin{lemma} \label{lem4.5} 
Let $u$ and $\beta $ be the solutions to Problem
$\mathcal{P}_{2}^{V}$ and Problem $\mathcal{P}_3^{\beta _{u}}$,
respectively. Then we have:\\
 (i) $u^n\to u$ and $\tilde{u}^n\to \dot{u}$
strongly in $L^{\infty }(0,T;V)$, For $t\in (t_i,t_{i+1})$, \\
(ii) $\beta ^n\to \beta $ strongly in $L^{\infty
}(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _3))$, For $t\in (t_i,t_{i+1})$
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
(i) Since $u\in W^{1,\infty }(0,T,V)$, we deduce that $u^n\to u$
and $\widetilde{\dot{u}}^n\to \dot{u}$ strongly in $L^{\infty
}(0,T;V)$, For $t\in (t_i,t_{i+1})$.

(ii) For $t\in (t_i,t_{i+1})$ we have
\[
\|\beta ^n(t)-\beta (t)\|_{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}\leq \|\beta ^n(t)-\beta
(t_{i+1})\|_{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}+\|\beta (t_{i+1})-\beta (t)\|_{L^{2}(\Gamma
_3)}.
\]
As $\beta \in W^{1,\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _3))$, we have
\[
\|\beta (t_{i+1})-\beta (t)\|_{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}
\leq \frac{T}{n}\|\dot{\beta}\|_{L^{\infty }(0,T;L^{2}(\Gamma _3))}.
\]
Using the properties of $R_{\nu }$ and $R_{\tau }$, in \cite{c4}, we have
\[
\lim_{n\to \infty }\max_{i=0,\dots,n}\|\beta ^{i}-\beta
(t_i)\|_{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}=0.
\]
So we deduce that
\[
\lim_{n\to \infty }\max_{t\in [ 0,T]}\|\beta
^n(t)-\beta (t)\|_{L^{2}(\Gamma _3)}=0.
\]
\end{proof}

Now we have all the ingredients to prove the following proposition.

\begin{proposition}\label{prop4.6} 
$(u,\beta )$ is a solution to Problem $\mathcal{P}_1^{V}$.
\end{proposition}

\begin{proof}
In the inequality \eqref{e3.1}, for $v\in V$ set $w=u(t_i)+v\Delta t$ and
divide by $\Delta t$; we obtain 
\begin{align*}
&a(u(t_{i+1}),v-\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})+j_{nc}(u(t_{i+1}),
v-\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})+j_{fr}(u(t_{i+1}),v)\\
&-j_{fr}(u(t),\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})
+j_{ad}(\beta ^{i+1},u(t_{i+1}),v-\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})\\
&\geq (f^{i+1},v-\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})_V\,.
\end{align*}
Whence for any $v\in L^{2}(0,T;V)$, we have
\begin{align*}
&a(u(t_{i+1}),v-\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})+j_{nc}(u(t_{i+1}),
 v-\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})+j_{fr}(u(t_{i+1}),v)\\
&-j_{fr}(u(t_{i+1}),\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})
+j_{ad}(\beta ^{i+1},u(t_{i+1}),v-\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})\\
&\geq (f^{i+1},v-\frac{\Delta u(t_i)}{\Delta t})_V
\end{align*}
Integrating both sides of the above inequality on $(0,T)$, we obtain
\begin{equation} \label{e4.2}
\begin{aligned}
&a(u^n(t),v(t)-\widetilde{\dot{u}}^n)+j_{fr}(u^n(t),v(t))
 -j_{fr}(u^n(t),\widetilde{\dot{u}}^n(t))\\
&+j_{nc}(u^n(t),v(t)-\widetilde{\dot{u}}^n(t))
+j_{ad}(\beta ^n(t),u^n(t),v(t)-\widetilde{\dot{u}}^n(t))\\
& \geq (f^n(t),v(t)-\widetilde{\dot{u}}^n(t))
\end{aligned}
\end{equation}
To pass to the limit in this inequality we need to establish the following
properties. After whihc the proof will be complete.
\end{proof}


\begin{lemma} \label{lem4.7} 
We have the following properties for $v\in L^{2}(0,T;V)$:
\begin{gather}
\lim_{n\to \infty }\int_{0}^{T}a(u^n(t),v(t)-\widetilde{\dot{u}}
^n)dt=\int_{0}^{T}a(u(t),v(t)-\dot{u}(t))dt,  \label{e4.3}
\\
\liminf_{n\to \infty }\int_{0}^{T}j_{fr}(u^n(t),\widetilde{\dot{u}}
^n(t))dt\geq \int_{0}^{T}j_{fr}(u(t),\dot{u}(t))dt,  \label{e4.4}
\\
\lim_{n\to \infty
}\int_{0}^{T}j_{fr}(u^n(t),v(t))dt=\int_{0}^{T}j_{fr}(u(t),v(t))dt,
\label{e4.51} 
\\
\lim_{n\to \infty }\int_{0}^{T}j_{nc}(u^n(t),v(t)-\widetilde{\dot{u
}}^n(t))dt\geq \int_{0}^{T}j_{nc}(u(t),v(t)-\dot{u}(t))dt,  \label{e4.52}
\\
\lim_{n\to \infty }\int_{0}^{T}(f^n(t),v(t)-\widetilde{\dot{u}}
^n(t))_Vdt=\int_{0}^{T}(f(t),v(t)-\dot{u}(t))_Vdt,  \label{e4.6}
\\
\lim_{n\to \infty }\int_{0}^{T}j_{ad}(\beta ^n(t),u^n(t),v(t)-
\widetilde{\dot{u}}^n(t))dt=\int_{0}^{T}j_{ad}(\beta (t),u(t),v(t)-\dot{u}
(t))dt.  \label{e4.7}
\end{gather}
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
For  \eqref{e4.3} and \eqref{e4.6} we refer the reader to 
\cite[Lemma 4.6]{t1}. 
To prove \eqref{e4.4} and \eqref{e4.52} it suffices to see
\cite[Lemma 3.5]{Motreanu}. 
To prove \eqref{e4.51}, it suffices to use Lemma \ref{lem4.5}(i). 
Finally for the proof of \eqref{e4.7} we refer the
reader to \cite[Lemma 3.8]{c4} and use the properties of operators 
$R_{\tau}$, $R_{\nu }$.

Now using lemma \ref{lem4.5}(ii) and Lemma \ref{lem4.7} we pass to the
limit as $n\to +\infty $ in the inequality \eqref{e4.2} to obtain
\begin{align*}
& \int_{0}^{T}a(u(t),v(t)-\dot{u}(t))dt+\int_{0}^{T}j_{fr}(u(t),v(t))dt-
\int_{0}^{T}j_{fr}(u(t),\dot{u}(t))dt \\
& +\int_{0}^{T}j_{nc}(u(t),v(t)-\dot{u}(t))dt+\int_{0}^{T}j_{ad}(\beta
(t),u(t),v(t)-\dot{u}(t))dt \\
& \geq \int_{0}^{T}(f(t),v(t)-\dot{u}(t))_Vdt,
\end{align*}
from which we deduce  \eqref{4.34} and also that $\beta $ is
the unique solution of the differential equation \eqref{4.35}.
\end{proof}

\begin{proof}[Proof of Theorem \ref{Th1}]
Let $(u,\beta )$ be the solution of  Problem $\mathcal{P}_1^{V}$. It
follows from \eqref{4.32}, \eqref{4.29}, \eqref{4.27}, \eqref{4.25}, 
\eqref{4.24}, \eqref{4.23} and \eqref{4.22} that $(u,\varphi ,\beta )$ is, at
least, a solution of Problem $\mathcal{P}^{V}$. Property \eqref{4.1}, 
\eqref{4.2} and \eqref{4.3} follow from Theorem \ref{Th3} and \eqref{4.25}.
\end{proof}

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\end{document}
