“…Gurtin et al (1998) generalized the original model by allowing all the components of the displacement vector to undergo a jump across the interface. The Gurtin-Murdoch model has been used to study nanosized rod (Altenbach et al, 2013;Grekov and Kostyrko, 2016), beams (Miller and Shenoy, 2000a;Eltaher et al, 2013;Ansari et al, 2015;Youcef et al, 2018), plates (Eremeyev et al, 2009;Ansari and Sahmani, 2011;Altenbach et al, 2012;Ansari and Norouzzadeh, 2016), shells (Altenbach et al, 2010;Altenbach and Eremeyev, 2011;Rouhi et al, 2016;Sahmani et al, 2016), films (Lu et al, 2011;Zhao and Rajapakse, 2013), wires (Diao et al, 2003;He and Lilley, 2008;Yvonnet et al, 2011), and inhomogeneities (Sharma et al, 2003;Duan et al, 2005a, b;Duan et al, 2005c;He and Li, 2006;Lim et al, 2006;Kushch et al, 2011;Kushch et al, 2013;Mi and Kouris, 2014;Nazarenko et al, 2016;Chen et al, 2018;Wang et al, 2018a), and much progress has been made in both analytical methods (Duan et al, 2009;Altenbach et al, 2013;Kushch et al, 2013;Dong et al, 2018) and numerical methods (Tian and Rajapakse, 2007;Feng et al, 2010;Dong and Pan, 2011).…”