This study investigates the two-dimensional behavior of a nonlocal micropolar double-porous thermoelastic material with voids (MDPTMWV) within the framework of the Moore–Gibson–Thompson (MGT) theory. An isotropic, homogeneous, initially stressed, rotating thermoelastic half-space with double porosity is considered. The MGT heat conduction model, incorporating memory-dependent derivatives and variable thermal conductivity, is employed. Governing equations are derived using generalized thermoelasticity, and analytical solutions for displacement, temperature, equilibrated stress, and thermal stress components are obtained via Lame’s potentials combined with normal mode analysis. The model is analyzed under boundary conditions including variable temperature, normal stress, constant equilibrated stress, and stress-free surfaces. Numerical evaluations using MATHEMATICA illustrate the effects of time, rotation, initial stress, and nonlocal parameters. The results indicate that double porosity and the considered parameters significantly amplify material responses, particularly under increasing time, rotation, initial stress, and nonlocal effects. Several special cases are discussed and validated against the literature. These findings provide insights relevant to geophysics, seismology, and earthquake engineering.
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Doaa M. Salah
AM Abd-Alla
SMM El-Kabeir
King Faisal University
Sohag University
Aswan University
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Salah et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b3ab2902a1e69014ccbdda — DOI: https://doi.org/10.57647/mathsci.2026.97471