\documentclass[reqno]{amsart}
\usepackage{hyperref}

\AtBeginDocument{{\noindent\small
\emph{Electronic Journal of Differential Equations},
Vol. 2012 (2012), No. 06, pp. 1--27.\newline
ISSN: 1072-6691. URL: http://ejde.math.txstate.edu or http://ejde.math.unt.edu
\newline ftp ejde.math.txstate.edu}
\thanks{\copyright 2012 Texas State University - San Marcos.}
\vspace{8mm}}

\begin{document}
\title[\hfilneg EJDE-2012/06\hfil Homogenization and correctors]
{Homogenization and correctors for composite media with coated
and highly anisotropic fibers}

\author[A. Boughammoura \hfil EJDE-2012/06\hfilneg]
{Ahmed Boughammoura}

\address{Ahmed Boughammoura \newline
Institut Sup\'erieur d'Informatique et de Math\'ematiques
de Monastir, Tunisia}
\email{Ahmed.Boughammoura@laposte.net}


\thanks{Submitted August 17, 2011. Published January 10, 2012.}
\subjclass[2000]{35B27, 35B40, 35K65, 76M50}
\keywords{Homogenization; correctors;
 monotone problem; composite media;
\hfill\break\indent coatings; highly anisotropic fibers}

\begin{abstract}
 This article presents the homogenization of a quasilinear
 elliptic-parabolic problem in  an $\varepsilon$-periodic medium
 consisting of  a set of highly aniso\-tropic fibers surrounded by
 coating layers, the whole  being embedded in a third material
 having an order $1$ conductivity. The conductivity along the
 fibers  is of order $1$ but the conductivities in the transverse
 directions and in the  coatings are scaled by $\mu=o(\varepsilon)$
 and $\varepsilon^p$, as $\varepsilon\to 0$,  respectively.  The heat
 flux are quasilinear, monotone functions of the temperature
 gradient. The heat capacities of the medium components are bounded
 but may vanish on certain subdomains, so the problem may become
 degenerate. By using the two-scale convergence method, we can
 derive the two-scale homogenized systems and prove some
 corrector-type results depending on the critical  value
 $\gamma=\lim_{\varepsilon\searrow 0}\varepsilon^p/\mu$.
\end{abstract}

\maketitle
\numberwithin{equation}{section}
\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section]
\newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma}
\newtheorem{proposition}[theorem]{Proposition}
\newtheorem{remark}[theorem]{Remark}
\newtheorem{definition}[theorem]{Definition}
\allowdisplaybreaks

\section{Introduction and statement of the problem}


Homogenization of  problems,  in composite media with fibers,  has
been  considered   in
\cite{Bouchite-Bellieud2,Cailleria-Dinari,Briane,Sili} and
further  references therein. Most of the previous works dealt with
the case of the  fiber-reinforced composite materials without
coatings. Motivated by the study of the effects of the combination
of the  insulating   coatings   and  the high anisotropy  of
fibers in the overall behavior of composite media, we propose
here,  a special class of fibrous structure exhibiting
non-standard effective models. Especially, in the present work, we
consider the homogenization of a   quasilinear elliptic-parabolic
problem in a three-phase conducting composite.  One of the
constituent materials corresponds to a set of  fibers surrounded
by a second material which works as an insulating  or coated
layers, and the whole is being embedded in a third material termed
matrix. The fibers are considered to be highly anisotropic,   with
a longitudinal  order $1$ conductivity    and a very low
conductivity  in the transverse directions. The conductivity of
the matrix  is  of order $1$ but  becomes very small in the
coatings. We shall refer to such material   as a composite medium
with coated and     highly anisotropic fibers.

In \cite{bough2008}, the author has dealt with the linear case.
Here, we continue this investigation by studying the case where
the heat flux are non-linear functions of the temperature
gradient. One common peculiarity of \cite{bough2008} and the
present work is that  the heat capacities $c_j, j=1,2,3$ are
assumed to degenerate  at some subdomains and even to vanish in
the whole domain.  Thus, our problem covers the  quasilinear
elliptic   equation  as well as the  quasilinear parabolic one in
a    composite medium with coated and     highly anisotropic
fibers.

The geometry of the medium is the same as in   \cite{bough2008}.
We shall recall it and keep globally the same notations.     We
denote by $\widetilde{Y}$ and ${Y}$  the   cubes
$]-\frac{1}{2},\frac{1}{2}[^{2}$ and
$]-\frac{1}{2},\frac{1}{2}[^{3}$ respectively, thus
${Y}=\widetilde{Y}\times {\mathrm I}$,
${\mathrm I}=]-\frac{1}{2},\frac{1}{2}[$.
We  assume that $\widetilde{Y}$is partitioned as
$\widetilde{Y}=\widetilde{Y}_{1}\cup \widetilde{Y}_{13}
\cup \widetilde{Y}_{3}\cup \widetilde{Y}_{23}\cup \widetilde{Y}_{2}$
where $\widetilde{Y}_{1}, \widetilde{Y}_{2}, \widetilde{Y}_{3}$
are three connected open subsets such that
$ \widetilde{Y}_{1}\cap \widetilde{Y}_{2}=\emptyset$,
$\partial\widetilde{Y}\cap\widetilde{Y}_{3}=\emptyset$
and where $\widetilde{Y}_{\alpha 3},\ \alpha=1,2$ is the interface
between $\widetilde{Y}_{\alpha}$ and $\widetilde{Y}_{3}$;
thus $\widetilde{Y}_{3}$ separates $\widetilde{Y}_{1}$
and $\widetilde{Y}_{2}$ (see Figure 1). For  $i=1,2,3$ we denote
$\chi_i $ the characteristic function of
$Y_i:=\widetilde{Y_i}\times {\mathrm I}$ and
$\theta_1,\theta_2,\theta_3$ their respective Lebesgue measures
which are  supposed to be of the same  magnitude order.
Let $ \widetilde E_i$ the $\mathbb {Z}^{2}$-translates  of
$\widetilde Y_i$
(i.e., $\widetilde E_i:= \widetilde Y_i+\mathbb {Z}^{2}$) and
$\widetilde\Gamma_{\alpha 3}$, $\alpha=1,2$ the surface
separating $\widetilde E_\alpha$ and  $\widetilde E_3$.
\emph{We shall assume that only $\widetilde E_2$ is connected}.
We introduce the contracted sets
$ \widetilde Y_i^{\varepsilon}:={\varepsilon}\widetilde Y_i$,
$\widetilde  E_i^{\varepsilon}:={\varepsilon} \widetilde E_i$,
$i=1,2,3$ and  $\widetilde \Gamma_{\alpha 3}^{\varepsilon}
:={\varepsilon} \widetilde\Gamma_{\alpha 3}$, $\alpha=1,2,$ where
${\varepsilon}$ is a small positive parameter.
Now, let  $\widetilde\Omega$ be a regular bounded domain in
$\mathbb {R}^{2}$. We denote by
$\widetilde\Omega_i^{\varepsilon}:=\widetilde\Omega \cap
\widetilde E_i^{\varepsilon}$, and
$\widetilde S_{\alpha 3}^{\varepsilon}:=
\widetilde\Omega\cap\widetilde\Gamma_{\alpha 3}$.
Finally, let $\Omega:=  \widetilde\Omega\times {\mathrm I}$
be the cylinder having  a base  $\widetilde\Omega$ and a height $1$
and $\Omega_i^{\varepsilon}:=\widetilde\Omega_i^{\varepsilon}\times
{\mathrm I}$, $i=1,2,3$.


Henceforth, $x=(\widetilde x,x_3)$ and $y=(\widetilde y,y_3)$ denote
points of $\mathbb {R}^3$ and $Y$ respectively and by $\widetilde{y}$
and $\widetilde{x}$ we denote the transverse vectors $(y_1,y_{2})$
and $(x_1, x_{2})$ respectively. We use the notation
$\partial_{x_i}$ for the partial derivative with respect to $x_i$.
Let $T>0$ be given, we define, then, the corresponding  space-time
domains  $Q=(0,T)\times \Omega$ and
$ Q_i^\varepsilon=(0,T)\times \Omega^\varepsilon_i$, $i=1,2,3$.

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\end{picture}
\caption{A typical basic  cell $\widetilde{Y}$}
\label{fig1}
\end{figure}


 Let $p>1$ be a real number and let $p'$ its conjugate: $p=p'(p-1)$.
For $k=1,2,3$, let $c_k \in  L^\infty (\mathbb{R}^{3})$ be the heat
capacity of the $k$-th component.
These functions are $Y$-periodic  with respect to $y$ with a
period $Y$  and satisfy the  following assumption:
\begin{itemize}
\item[(A1)] $0  \leq  c_k(y)$   a.e. $y \in Y$, $k=1,2,3$.
%\label{a1}
\end{itemize}
The corresponding $\varepsilon$-periodic coefficients are  defined by
\begin{equation}
   c_k^\varepsilon(x)=c_k(\frac{x}{\varepsilon}),\quad x \in \Omega_k^\varepsilon,\; k=1,2,3.
\end{equation}
Concerning the heat flux, we shall suppose that they are given
by three non-linear $Y$-periodic vectorial functions
\begin{equation}
 \mathbb{A}_k(y,\xi) : \mathbb{R}^{3}\times\mathbb{R}^{3}\to \mathbb{R}^{3},\quad k=1,2,3,
 \end{equation}
satisfying the following assumptions
\begin{itemize}
\item[(A2)] for all $\xi\in\mathbb{R}^{3}$, the function
$  y\mapsto \mathbb{A}_k (y,\xi)$ is measurable and
$Y$-periodic,

\item[(A3)]  for a.e. $y\in Y$, the function
$ \xi\mapsto  \mathbb{A}_k (y,\xi)$ is continuous, \label{a2}

\item[(A4)] there exist a constant $c_0>0$ and $p>2$ such that,
for all $\xi\in\mathbb{R}^{3}$,
$$
 0\leq c_0|\xi|^p\leq \mathbb{A}_k(y,\xi).\xi
$$

\item[(A5)] there exist a constant  $c>0$ and $p>2$ such that
for all $\xi\in\mathbb{R}^{3}$,
$$
  |\mathbb{A}_k(y,\xi)|\leq c(1+|\xi|^{p-1}),
$$

\item[(A6)] the operators $\mathbb{A}_k$ are strictly monotone; i.e.,
for a.e. $y\in Y$,
$$
 (\mathbb{A}_k(y,\xi)-\mathbb{A}_k(y,\eta)).
(\xi-\eta)>0,\quad \forall \xi\ne \eta\quad \text{in }  \mathbb{R}^{3}.
$$
\end{itemize}

To prove the corrector results, we need to assume stronger
hypotheses of monotonicity:
\begin{itemize}
\item[(A5')] there exist a constant  $K_1>0$  such that,
for $\xi,\eta\in \mathbb{R}^{3}$ and a.e. $y\in Y$,
$$
  |\mathbb{A}_k(y,\xi)- \mathbb{A}_k(y,\eta)|\leq K_1 (|\xi|+|\eta|)^{p-2}|\xi-\eta|,
$$

\item[(A6')]  there exist a constant  $K_2>0$  such that,
for $\xi,\eta\in \mathbb{R}^{3}$ and a.e. $y\in Y$,
$$
 (\mathbb{A}_k(y,\xi)-\mathbb{A}_k(y,\eta)).(\xi-\eta)
\geq K_2(|\xi|+|\eta|)^{p-2}|\xi-\eta|^2.
$$
\item[(A7)]
The function $\mathbb{A}_1$ is independent of the vertical coordinate
and has the following form
$$
\mathbb{A}_1(y,\xi):=\mathbb{A}_1(\widetilde y,\xi)
=\begin{pmatrix}
      \widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1(\widetilde y,\widetilde\xi)\\
     \mathbb{A}_{13}(\widetilde y,\xi_3)
 \end{pmatrix}.
$$
\end{itemize}

Obviously,  the functions
\begin{gather*}
\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1(\widetilde y,\widetilde\xi) :
 \mathbb{R}^2\times\mathbb{R}^2\to \mathbb{R}^2,\\
\mathbb{A}_{13}(\widetilde y,\xi_3) :\ \mathbb{R}^2\times\mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R}
\end{gather*}
satisfy  assumptions (A4)--(A6) by choosing
$\xi=(\widetilde\xi,0)$ and $(0,\xi_3)$ respectively.

An example of $\mathbb{A}_k$ satisfy the assumptions  (A2)--(A7) is
$$
\mathbb{A}_1(y,\xi) =\begin{pmatrix}
      |\widetilde\xi|^{p-2}\widetilde\xi\\
     |\xi_3|^{p-2}\xi_3
 \end{pmatrix},\quad
\mathbb{A}_\alpha(y,\xi) =|\xi|^{p-2}\xi,\quad \alpha=2,3;
$$
i.e., the corresponding $p$-Laplacian operators.

Then,  the diffusion through the material filling the sets $E_1^\varepsilon$,
$E_2^\varepsilon$ and $E_3^\varepsilon$ is, respectively,
$$
\mathbb{A}_1^{\varepsilon} (x,\xi):=\begin{pmatrix}
       \mu(\varepsilon){\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1}^\varepsilon(x,\widetilde\xi)\\
     \mathbb{A}_{13}^\varepsilon(x,\xi_3) \end{pmatrix},\quad
\mathbb{A}_2^\varepsilon(x,\xi):=\mathbb{A}_2(\frac{x}{\varepsilon},\xi),\quad
\mathbb{A}_3^\varepsilon(x,\xi):=\mathbb{A}_3(\frac{x}{\varepsilon},\xi),
$$
where
$$
{\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1}^\varepsilon(x,\widetilde\xi)
={\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1}(\frac{\widetilde x}{\varepsilon},\widetilde\xi),\quad
\mathbb{A}_{13}^\varepsilon(x,\xi_3) =\mathbb{A}_{13}(\frac{\widetilde x}{\varepsilon},\xi_3).
$$
The global diffusion and the  heat capacity of the medium is
respectively
\begin{gather*}
\mathbb{A}^{\varepsilon} (x,\xi)=\sum_{k=1}^2\chi_k^\varepsilon(x)\mathbb{A}_k^{\varepsilon}
(x,\xi)+\varepsilon^p\chi_3^\varepsilon(x)\mathbb{A}_3^{\varepsilon} (x,\xi),\\
c^\varepsilon(x)=\sum_{k=1}^3\chi_k^\varepsilon(x)c_k^\varepsilon(x).
\end{gather*}
 Let us assume that the lateral and bottom  boundaries of $\Omega$
are maintained at a  fixed temperature
(homogeneous Dirichlet condition), while the top boundary is
insulated (homogeneous Neumann condition), and that the initial
distribution of the  temperature on $\Omega$ is given
for every $\varepsilon$ as
$$
u_0^\varepsilon(x)=\sum_{k=1}^3 \chi_k^\varepsilon(x)u_{0k}^\varepsilon(x).
$$
Then,  the evolution of the temperature $u^\varepsilon(t,x)$ is governed
by the following initial boundary value problem, being
in fact,  a sequence of problems $({\mathcal P}_\varepsilon)$ indexed by
$\varepsilon$:
\begin{equation}\label{Pep} %({\mathcal P}_\varepsilon)
\begin{gathered}
   \frac{\partial}{\partial t}(c^\varepsilon (x  )u^\varepsilon (t,x ))
  =    \operatorname{div}(\mathbb{A}^\varepsilon (x,\nabla u^\varepsilon (t,x )))
+  f^\varepsilon (t,x ), \quad  x \in  \Omega,\; t>0 ,
\\
 u^\varepsilon(t,  x  )   =   0,  \   x \in \partial\Omega
\cap\{-\frac{1}{2}\leq x_3 < \frac{1}{2}\}=:  \Gamma_{LB} , \quad t>0,
\\
{\mathbb{A}}^\varepsilon(x,\nabla u^\varepsilon (t,  x )).n=0, \quad
   x \in \partial\Omega\setminus \Gamma_{LB} ,\quad t>0,  \\
 u^\varepsilon(0,x )   =   u_0^\varepsilon(x ), \quad  x  \in \Omega,
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
where $n$ denotes the outward normal to the boundary of $\Omega$, the
subscript $L$ (resp. $B$) stands for lateral (resp. bottom)
boundary  and  $f^\varepsilon\in L^{p'}(0,T;L^{p'}(\Omega))$ represents a
given time-dependent heat source. The precise meaning of the
initial condition will be done in the following section.

In the linear context, models of particular interest  are
 developed  by Mabrouk-Samadi  \cite{msam},
Mabrouk-Boughammoura \cite{mbou2} and Showalter-Visarraga
\cite{showvisa} for the so-called highly heteregeneous medium
which consits of two connected ``hard" components having
comparable  conductivities, separated by a third ``soft" material
having a much lower conductivity. The common point of these works
is that the  three phases have only highly contrasting isotropic
conductivities. These models do not display a directional
dependence of the effective fields in  the resulting limit
problems. However, in the present model and in \cite{bough2008},
one of the phases (the fibers) have also highly anisotropic
conductivity. This ``partially" highly anisotropy in the fibers
leads  to some kind of directional dependence on the macro and
micro variables.

Mathematically, the combination of the ``partially" highly
anisotropy and the insulating   coatings  poses an interesting
challenge in the homogenization process. In particular, we will
see, in the case  $  \gamma\in \mathbb{R}^*_+$, that    the resulting
two-scale homogenized systems is ``strongly" influenced by this
combination : the effective temperature field is obtained by
solving a homogenized problem in the domain $\Omega$ and an auxiliary
problem in the  coated fiber $\overline{Y_1}\cup Y_3$ with a
non-standard boundary conditions across the interface  between the
fiber  and the coating (see  \eqref{hom1-gammaY13} and Remark
\ref{rkp}). Hence, the main feature of the present work is  to
provide  ``rigorous"   models  for quasilinear  heat transfer
problem in  fibrous composite materials taking in account the
influence  of     the physical properties, at the micro-scale,  of
the coating    and the   fiber. In particular,  we derive some new
effective interface   conditions which describe the interaction
between the heat transfer processes of conduction   in the fibers
and   the coatings (see \eqref{transmission2} and
\eqref{transmission1}). Furthermore, we improve these models by
some corrector-type results.

Finally,  the closest work, as far as we know,   to ours was done
by Mabrouk   \cite{Mabrouk}, in which the author studied the
homogenization of a nonlinear degenerate heat transfer problem in
a highly heterogeneous medium.  Although the mathematical
framework used in \cite{Mabrouk}  is closely  similar, the two
situations are clearly distinct in the geometry of the
microstructure. Moreover,  the homogenized results of
\cite{Mabrouk} are recovered, here, when
 $\gamma:=\lim_{\varepsilon\to 0}\varepsilon^p/\mu=0$ by replacing, formally,  the operator
$\partial_{x_3}$ by $\nabla$. However, our results in the case
$0<\gamma<\infty$ can not be obtained by the physical setting
considered in \cite{Mabrouk}.  The corrector results are not
addressed in  \cite{Mabrouk}, that is only weakly convergent
results are proved. Yet, here we shall prove strong convergence of
the gradients of temperature as well as the heat  flux by adding
some correctors (see Section 5). Thus, the present study is
actually quite different and can be considered as an improvement
of \cite{Mabrouk} and  a generalization of   \cite{bough2008} to
quasilinear (monotone operators in the gradient) heat transfer
problem in     composite materials with coated and     highly
anisotropic fibers.


\section{Mathematical framework}


Hereafter, various spaces of functions on $\Omega$ will be used. For
each $p>1$, $L^p(\Omega)$ and $W^{1,p}(\Omega)$ are the usual
Lebesgue space and Sobolev space respectively.  If $\mathbb{R}$ is
a Banach space, we denote $\mathbb{R}'$ its dual ; the value of
$x'\in \mathbb{R}'$ at $x\in \mathbb{R}$ is denoted $x'(x)$ or
sometimes $\langle x',x\rangle_{\mathbb{R}',\mathbb{R}}$. If
${\mathbb H}$ is a Hilbert space, we denote its scalar product
$(.,.)_{\mathbb H}$, the dot denotes the usual scalar product in
$\mathbb{R}^{3}$.  If $\mathbb{R}$ is a Banach space and $X$ is a
topological one, $\mathcal{C}(X;\mathbb{R})$ is the space of
continuous $\mathbb{R}$-valued functions on $X$ with the sup-norm.
For any measure space $\Omega$, $L^p(\Omega;\mathbb{R})$ is the space of
$p$-th power norm-summable   functions on $\Omega$ with values in
$\mathbb{R}$. If $\Omega=(0,T)$ is the time space, we shall often
write $L^p(0,T;\mathbb{R})$. In particular, spaces of $Y$-periodic
functions will be denoted by a subscript $\sharp$. For example,
$\mathcal{C}_\sharp(Y)$ is the Banach space of functions which
are defined on $\mathbb{R}^{3}$, continuous and $Y$-periodic. Similarly,
${L^p_\sharp}(Y)$ is the Banach space of functions in
${L^p}_{\mathrm{loc}}(\mathbb{R}^{3})$ which are $Y$-periodic. We endow
this space with the norm of ${L^p}(Y)$ and remark that it can be
identified with the space of $Y$-periodic extensions to $\mathbb{R}^{3}$
of the functions in ${L^p}(Y)$. Similarly, we define the Banach
space $W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y)$ with the usual norm of $W^{1,p}(Y)$.

As in  \cite{bough2008}, to have   a weak formulation of the above
problem   we shall use the convenient mathematical model built in
\cite{Mabrouk},   using the functional framework, developed by
Showalter  for degenerate parabolic equations (see
\cite{showalter}, Section III.6). Let us recall   the precise
meaning of the weak formulation  of the problem we investigate.
For more details see \cite{mbou, Mabrouk, bough2008}.


Let $p\geq 2$ and $p'$ its conjugate. We define the following
Banach spaces
\begin{gather*}
V=W^{1,p}_{\Gamma_{LB}}(\Omega):=\{ u \in W^{1,p}(\Omega):
 u=0 \text{ on } \Gamma_{LB}\},\quad
\mathcal{V}= L^p(0,T;V),\\
V' , \mathcal{V}'=L^{p'}(0,T;V')
\end{gather*}
be their dual spaces.
For   $\varepsilon>0$, let $ C^\varepsilon,A^\varepsilon:\ V\to V'$ be
continuous operators, which are  defined by  the
continuous bilinear forms on $V\times V$:
\begin{gather*}
\langle C^\varepsilon u,v\rangle_{V',V}  =   c^\varepsilon (u,v):=
  \int_{\Omega} c^\varepsilon(x)u(x)v(x)dx, \\
\langle A^\varepsilon u,v\rangle_{V',V}  =   a^\varepsilon (u,v):=
  \int_{\Omega} \mathbb{A}^\varepsilon(x,\nabla u(x))\nabla v(x) dx.
 \end{gather*}
Let $V_c^\varepsilon $ be the completion of $V$ with the semi-scalar
product, defined by the form $c^\varepsilon$ and let $V_c^{'\varepsilon}$  be its
dual. Then, we have $V_c^\varepsilon=\{ u : (c^\varepsilon)^{1/2} u \in
L^2({\Omega})\}$ and ${V_c^\varepsilon}'= \{ (c^\varepsilon)^{1/2}u,\ u\in
L^2({\Omega}) \}$. The operator $C^\varepsilon$ admits a continuous
extension from $V_c^\varepsilon$ into ${V_c^\varepsilon}'$ denoted also  by
$C^\varepsilon$.  Given $ f^\varepsilon \in L^{p'}(0,T;L^{p'}({\Omega}))$ or more
generally $f^\varepsilon$ in $\mathcal{V}'$ and $w_0^\varepsilon $ in
${V_c^\varepsilon}'$, we are now able to give a weak formulation of the
above initial-boundary value problem as the following abstract
Cauchy problem
\begin{equation}\label{cauchy}
 \text{Find } u\in \mathcal{V}:\; \frac{d}{dt}{\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u
+ {\mathcal{A}}^\varepsilon u = f^\varepsilon \in \mathcal{V}',\quad
{\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u(0)= w_0^\varepsilon \in  {V_c^\varepsilon}'.
\end{equation}
Here, ${\mathcal{A}}^\varepsilon$  and ${\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon$  are the
realization of $A^\varepsilon$ and $C^\varepsilon$ as operators from
$\mathcal{V}$ to $\mathcal{V}'$,
that is precisely $({\mathcal{A}}^\varepsilon u(t),{\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u(t))
= (A^\varepsilon (u(t)), C^\varepsilon (u(t)))$ for a.e. $t\in (0,T)$.

Let us underline that, in the abstract formulation above, we
implicitly require that $\frac{d}{dt}{\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u $ belongs
to $\mathcal{V}'$. This allows us to give a precise meaning  to
the initial condition ${\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u(0)$. Thus, given
$u_0^\varepsilon$ in $V_c^\varepsilon$ and $w_0^\varepsilon$ in ${V_c^\varepsilon}'$ related by
$w_0^\varepsilon=c^\varepsilon u_0^\varepsilon$, we can express the initial condition by
one of the two equivalent equalities
\begin{equation}
   ({\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u^\varepsilon)(0)= C^\varepsilon u^\varepsilon(0)
=w_0^\varepsilon \in {V_c^\varepsilon}' \Longleftrightarrow
   (c^\varepsilon)^{1/2}u^\varepsilon(0)= (c^\varepsilon)^{1/2}u^\varepsilon_0 \in  L^2( {\Omega}).
\end{equation}

 We define the Banach space $W_p^\varepsilon (0,T):=\{ u\in \mathcal{V}: \frac{d}{dt}\mathcal{C}^\varepsilon u\in \mathcal{V}' \}$,
then, the abstract Cauchy problem can, thereby, be  written more
explicitly as:
Find $u$ in $W_p^\varepsilon(0,T)$ such that
\begin{equation} \label{PCep}
\begin{gathered}
     \frac{d}{dt} {\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u(t)+{\mathcal{A}}^\varepsilon u(t)
=   f^\varepsilon(t) \in V' \quad \text{for a.e. }  t\in (0,T),\\
      {\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u(0)   =   w_0^\varepsilon \quad \text{in } {V_c^\varepsilon}'.
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
The initial condition is meaningful since $u$ is in
$W_p^\varepsilon(0,T)$ then
${\mathcal{C}}^\varepsilon u\in \mathcal{C}(0,T;{V_c^\varepsilon}')$
by  \cite[Proposition 6.3]{showalter}.

For the present study, we  need to recall some
equivalent variational formulations of the problem \eqref{PCep}
 from  \cite[Proposition 1.2]{Mabrouk}.

\begin{proposition}\label{var-equiv}
The following statements are equivalent:
\begin{enumerate}
\item $u$ is the solution  of \eqref{PCep}.

\item  $u\in W_p^\varepsilon(0,T)$ and for all $v\in W_p^\varepsilon(0,T)$
with $v(T)=0$, we have
    \begin{equation}\label{equiv2}
 -\int_0^T \langle u(t), v'(t) \rangle_{V^\varepsilon_c}dt
+\int_0^T a^\varepsilon(u(t),v(t))dt=\int_0^Tf^\varepsilon(t)(v(t))dt+w_0^\varepsilon (v(0)),
    \end{equation}
 this, by density, holds for all $v\in L^p(0,T; V)$ such that
  $v'\in L^{p'}(0,T; V^\varepsilon_c)$.

\item $u\in { L^p(0,T;V)}$ and for all $v\in W^{1,p}(0,T;V),$ we have
 \begin{equation} \label{formulation-faible}
\begin{split}
 &-\int_Q   c^\varepsilon  u v'dx\,dt
+ \mu(\varepsilon)  \int_{Q_1^\varepsilon} {\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1}^\varepsilon({\widetilde x},
\nabla_{\widetilde x} u).\nabla_{\widetilde x}v dx\,dt\\
&+ \int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}  \mathbb{A}_{13}^\varepsilon
 (\widetilde x,\partial_{{x_3}}  { u}).\partial_{{x_3}} {v} dx\,dt
 \\
&+ \int_{Q_2^\varepsilon}   \mathbb{A}_2^\varepsilon({x},\nabla_{ x} u).
 \nabla_{ x}v\,dx\,dt
+ \varepsilon^p \int_{Q_3^\varepsilon} \mathbb{A}_3^\varepsilon({x},\nabla_{x} u).\nabla_{x}v\,
 dx\,dt  \\
& =  \int_Q fv\,dx\,dt-\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon  u(T,x) v(T,x)dx
+\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon u_0^\varepsilon v(0,x)dx.
\end{split}
\end{equation}
\end{enumerate}
\end{proposition}


\begin{remark}{\rm
 For each $\varepsilon>0$, the operator
$\mathcal{A}^\varepsilon: \mathcal{V}\to \mathcal{V}'$ is continuous,
monotone,  coercive and bounded, and the operator
$\mathcal{C}^\varepsilon: \mathcal{V}\to \mathcal{V}'$ is continuous,
linear, symmetric and monotone. Hence, the Cauchy
problem  \eqref{PCep} admits, for each $\varepsilon>0$, a unique
solution $u\in W_p^\varepsilon(0,T)$ by  \cite[Corollary 6.3]{showalter}.
}\end{remark}


Throughout this work, we shall assume  that
$$
u_0^\varepsilon(x)=u_0(x)\in L^p(\Omega).
$$
Hereafter, let $ f\in L^{p'}(0,T;L^{p'}({\Omega}))$ be fixed.

Our objective is to study the behavior of the sequence  $\{ u^\varepsilon
\}$ as $ \varepsilon \to 0$ moreover,    we prove a corrector results for
the gradients and flux under the strong monotonicity conditions
(A5') and  (A6'). This will be achieved
below, in particular, we will show that the limit depends on the
critical  value $\gamma=\lim_{\varepsilon\downarrow 0} \frac{\varepsilon^p}{\mu
}$.

Our further analysis   will be, as in \cite{bough2008}, based  on
the method of the  two-scale convergence
\cite{allaire,nguetseng1}. For the sake of clarity, we recall its
definition.


\begin{definition}\rm
  A function  $\phi(t,x,y)\in L^p(Q\times Y,\mathcal{C}_\sharp(Y))$
satisfying
  \begin{equation}\label{cv12sp}
  \lim_{\varepsilon\to 0}\int_Q \phi(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})^p\,dt\,dx
=\int_Q\int_Y \phi(t,x,y)^p\,dt\,dx\,dy.
\end{equation}
is called admissible test function.
    \end{definition}

\begin{definition} \rm
A sequence $u^\varepsilon$ in $L^p(Q)$ two-scale converges to a function
$u^0\in L^p(Q\times Y)$, and we denote this
$u^\varepsilon\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to }u^0$
($u^\varepsilon\stackrel{2s}{\to }u^0$ if p=2 ), if, for any
$\phi(t,x,y)\in  {\mathcal D}(Q,\mathcal{C}_\sharp(Y))$,
  \begin{equation}\label{cv2sp}
\lim_{\varepsilon\to 0}\int_Qu^\varepsilon(t,x)\phi(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})\,dt\,dx
=\int_Q\int_Yu^0(t,x,y)\phi(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy.
\end{equation}
\end{definition}

Throughout the paper, we denote by C a constant not depending on
$\varepsilon$ and   whose value may vary from one line to the next.
From a bounded sequence in a Lebesgue space, we can take a
subsequence that converges weakly,  but virtually all the
subsequences converge to the same limit as  the limiting equations
have a unique solution, so we normally ignore to mention the term
``subsequence".

\section{A priori estimates}

First, we recall the fundamental lemma which generalizes to the
case $p>2$ lemma 2.1. of   \cite{bough2008}, proved for $p=2$.
We shall not give the proof since it involves only minor modifications
of the case $p=2$.

\begin{lemma}\label{Mabrouk-samadi}
 There exists   a constant $C$ such that, for every $v\in V$,
we have
\begin{equation}
\|v\|^p_{L^p(\Omega)}\leq C(\|\partial_{x_3}  v\|^p_{L^p(\Omega_1^\varepsilon)}+ \|\nabla v\|^p_{L^p( \Omega_2^\varepsilon)} +  \varepsilon^{p}\|\nabla  v\|^p_{L^p(\Omega_3^\varepsilon)}).
\end{equation}
\end{lemma}

The above lemma is used for proving the following a priori estimates.

\begin{lemma}\label{lemma-estimates}
Let $f^\varepsilon=f$,  then, here exists   a constant $C$ such that
\begin{gather}\label{estimate1}
  \|u^\varepsilon\|_{L^p(Q)} \leq C,
\\ \label{estimate2}
(\mu^{1/p}\|\nabla_{\widetilde x} u^\varepsilon\|_{L^p(Q_1^\varepsilon)},
\|  \partial_{x_3} u^\varepsilon \|_{L^p(Q_1^\varepsilon)}) \leq C,
\\ \label{estimate3}
\Big(\| \nabla u^\varepsilon\|_{L^p(Q_2^\varepsilon)},
\varepsilon\| \nabla u^\varepsilon\|_{L^p(Q_3^\varepsilon)}\Big)   \leq C,
\\ \label{estimate22}
\Big(\mu^{1/p'}\|\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1^\varepsilon
(x,\nabla_{\widetilde x} u^\varepsilon)\|_{L^{p'}
(Q_1^\varepsilon)},\|\mathbb{A}_{13}^\varepsilon(x,
\partial_{x_3} u^\varepsilon) \|_{L^{p'}(Q_1^\varepsilon)}\Big) \leq C,
\\ \label{estimate33}
(\|\mathbb{A}_2^\varepsilon(x, \nabla u^\varepsilon)\|_{L^{p'}(Q_2^\varepsilon)},
\varepsilon^{\frac{p}{p'}}\|\mathbb{A}_3^\varepsilon(x, \nabla u^\varepsilon)\|_{L^{p'}(Q_3^\varepsilon)})   \leq C.
\end{gather}
Moreover, if $0<c_0\leq c_3(y)$, then
$\| u^\varepsilon \|_{L^{\infty}(0,T; L^2(\Omega))}$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
First, let us assume that  $u^\varepsilon$ is a solution of
\eqref{Pep}. Since $u^\varepsilon\in W_p^\varepsilon(0,T)$,  we can
choose  $v=u^\varepsilon(t)$ in \eqref{equiv2} and using the following
identity from \cite[Proposition 3.1]{showalter},   or
\cite[Proposition 1.1]{Mabrouk},
$$
\frac{1}{2}\frac{d}{dt}\langle \frac{}{}\mathcal{C}^\varepsilon u(t),
u(t)\rangle_{V',V}
=\langle\frac{d}{dt} \mathcal{C}^\varepsilon u(t),u(t)\rangle_{V',V}
$$
after integration over $(0,T)$,  we deduce
\begin{equation} \label{tt}
\begin{split}
&\frac{1}{2} \int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)(u^\varepsilon(T,x))^2dx
+\int_0^T \int_\Omega  \mathbb{A}^\varepsilon(x,\nabla u^\varepsilon(s,x)).
\nabla u^\varepsilon(s,x)\,dx\,ds\\
&= \int_0^T\int_\Omega f(s,x)(u^\varepsilon(s,x))
\,dx\,ds+\frac{1}{2} \int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x) (u_0)^2dx.
\end{split}
\end{equation}
Thus,
\begin{align*}
  &\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)(u^\varepsilon(T,x))^2dx
+\int_0^T \int_\Omega  \mathbb{A}^\varepsilon(x,\nabla u^\varepsilon(s,x)).\nabla u^\varepsilon(s,x)
 \,dx\,ds \\
&\leq   \int_0^T\int_\Omega |f(s,x)\|(u^\varepsilon(s,x))|\,dx\,ds+C.
\end{align*}
By Young's inequality,  for all $\eta>0$,
\[
    \int_0^T\int_\Omega |f(s,x)\|(u^\varepsilon(s,x))|\,dx\,ds
\leq \frac{\eta}{p}\|f\|^{p'}_{L^{p'}(Q)}
+\frac{1}{p\eta^{p-1}}\|u^\varepsilon\|^{p}_{L^{p}(Q)}.
\]
Thus, using assumption (A5),
\begin{align*}
&\mu    \int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}    |\nabla_{\widetilde x}u^\varepsilon|^p\,dx\,dt
+\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}  |\partial_{{x_3}}  {u^\varepsilon}|^p \,dx\,dt\\
&+\int_{Q_2^\varepsilon}   |\nabla_{ x}u^\varepsilon|^p\,dx\,dt
+\varepsilon^p   \int_{Q_3^\varepsilon}  |\nabla_{x}u^\varepsilon)|^p \,dx\,dt  \\
&\leq  \frac{\eta}{p}\|f\|^{p'}_{L^{p'}(Q)}
 +\frac{1}{p\eta^{p-1}}\|u^\varepsilon\|^{p}_{L^{p}(Q)} +C.
\end{align*}
Since $u^\varepsilon(t,.)\in V$,  using lemma \ref{Mabrouk-samadi}
in the right hand side, we obtain
\begin{align*}
&\mu    \int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}    |\nabla_{\widetilde x}u^\varepsilon|^p\,dx\,dt
+ \int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}  |\partial_{{x_3}}  {u^\varepsilon}|^p \,dx\,dt
 +   \int_{Q_2^\varepsilon}   |\nabla_{ x}u^\varepsilon|^p\,dx\,dt
 + \varepsilon^p    \int_{Q_3^\varepsilon}  |\nabla_{x}u^\varepsilon)|^p \,dx\,dt  \\
&\leq  C\frac{\eta}{p}+\frac{C}{p\eta^{p-1}}(\|\partial_{x_3}
u^\varepsilon\|^p_{L^p(\Omega_1^\varepsilon)}
+ \|\nabla u^\varepsilon\|^p_{L^p( \Omega_2^\varepsilon)}
+  \varepsilon^{p}\|\nabla  u^\varepsilon\|^p_{L^p(\Omega_3^\varepsilon)}) +C,
\end{align*}
we can absorb the right-hand side by choosing ${\eta^{p-1}} >1$.
Thus
\begin{gather*}
 \|u^\varepsilon\|_{L^p(Q)}\leq C, \\
(\mu\|\nabla_{\widetilde x} u^\varepsilon\|^p_{L^p(Q_1^\varepsilon)},
\|  \partial_{x_3} u^\varepsilon \|_{L^p(Q_1^\varepsilon)},
\| \nabla u^\varepsilon\|_{L^p(Q_2^\varepsilon)},
\varepsilon\| \nabla u^\varepsilon\|_{L^p(Q_3^\varepsilon)})   \leq C.
\end{gather*}
The  bounds  of $\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1^\varepsilon$, $\mathbb{A}_{13}^\varepsilon$
and $\mathbb{A}_{\alpha}^\varepsilon,\ \alpha=2,3$ are obtained using
H\"older's  inequality and assumption (A6).
\end{proof}

As a consequence of the a priori estimates mentioned above,
we have the following result.

\begin{lemma}\label{lemmacv}
Let $\gamma:=\lim_{\varepsilon\to 0}\frac{\varepsilon^p}{\mu}$.
Assume that $\gamma<+\infty$ and $f^\varepsilon =f$. There exists
\begin{gather*}
 u_2 \in  L^p(0,T; V),\quad
 v_1 \in L^p\big(Q; W^{1,p}_\sharp(\widetilde Y_1)/\mathbb{R}\big),\quad
 z\in L^p(Q\times Y), \\
(v_2,v_3)\in \prod _{i=2}^3 L^p(Q; W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_i)/\mathbb{R}),\quad
g_k\in L^{p'}(Q\times Y),\ u^*_k\in L^{2}(Q\times Y),\ k=1,2,3,
\end{gather*}
such that we have the following two-scale  convergence holds:
\begin{gather*}
 u^\varepsilon(t,x)
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to}
   \chi_1(y) v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y})+\chi_2(y) u_2(t,x)
+\chi_3(y) v_3(t,x,y), \\
  \chi_1^\varepsilon(x) (u^\varepsilon(t,x), \varepsilon \nabla_{\widetilde x} u^\varepsilon(x))
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to}
  \chi_1(y) (v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y}),  \nabla_{\widetilde y}
  v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y})),   \\
 \chi_1^\varepsilon(x) \partial_{x_3} u^\varepsilon(x)
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to}
  \chi_1(y) z(t,x,  y), \quad\text{such that }
 \partial_{x_3}  v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y})
 =  \int_{\mathrm I} z(t,x,y)dy_N,  \\
  \chi_2^\varepsilon(x)(u^\varepsilon(t,x), \nabla_x u^\varepsilon(t,x))
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to }
 \chi_2(y)(u_2(t,x),[\nabla_x   u_2(t,x)+ \nabla_y  v_2(t,x,y)]), \\
  \chi_3^\varepsilon(x)(u^\varepsilon(t,x),\varepsilon \nabla_x u^\varepsilon(t,x))
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to }
 \chi_3(y) (v_3(t,x,y), \nabla_y v_3 (t,x,y)),
  \\
    \mu^{1/p'}\chi_1^\varepsilon(x)\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_{\widetilde x}u^\varepsilon(t,x))
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p'}}{\to }
    \chi_1(y) \widetilde g_1(t,x,{ y}),  \\
   \chi_1^\varepsilon(x)\mathbb{A}_{13}^\varepsilon(x,\partial_{x_3}u^\varepsilon(t,x) )
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p'}}{\to }
   \chi_1(y)    g_{13 }(t,x,{ y}),
    \\
     \chi_2^\varepsilon(x)  \mathbb{A}_2^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_{x}u^\varepsilon(t,x))
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p'}}{\to }
    \chi_2(y) g_2(t,x,{ y}),
    \\
     \varepsilon^{\frac{p}{p'}} \chi_3^\varepsilon(x)  \mathbb{A}_3^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_{x}u^\varepsilon(t,x))
\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p'}}{\to }
    \chi_3(y) g_3(t,x,{ y}),
\\
    \chi_k^\varepsilon(x)(c^\varepsilon_k)^{1/2}u^\varepsilon(T,x)
\stackrel{\mathit{2s}}{\to }
   \chi_k(y)u^*_k(x,y),\quad k=1,2,3,\\
   (c^\varepsilon)^{1/2}u^\varepsilon(T,x)
\stackrel{\mathit{2s}}{\to }
   u^*(x,y):= \sum_{k=1}^3\chi_k(y)u^*_k(x,y).
    \end{gather*}
Moreover, there exists a unique function
$ w_3\in L^p(Q;W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_3))$
 such that
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
            v_3(t,x,y)=  u_2(t,x)+ w_3(t,x,y)\ \text{in }Y_3  \\
             w_3(t,x,y)=  v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y})- u_2(t,x) \ \text{on }{  Y_{13}:={\widetilde Y_{13}}\times {\mathrm I}}\\
               w_3(t,x,y)=0\ \text{on }{  Y_{23}:={\widetilde Y_{23}}\times {\mathrm I}}
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
and $  u^\varepsilon $ converges weakly in $L^p(Q)$  to
the function
$$
U(t,x)=(1-\theta_1) u_2(t,x)+\int_{{\widetilde Y}_1}
v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y})d{\widetilde y}+\int_{Y_3} w_3(t,x,y)dy.
$$
 \end{lemma}

The proof of the above lemma is the same as that of
\cite[Lemma 2.3]{bough2008}, we omit it.

\begin{remark}{\rm
If $\gamma=\infty$,  the sequence
$$
\varepsilon\chi_1^{\varepsilon}\nabla_{\widetilde x}{u^\varepsilon}
=\frac{\varepsilon}{{\mu^{1/p}}}{\mu^{1/p}}
\chi_1^{\varepsilon}\nabla_{\widetilde x}{u^\varepsilon}
$$
is not bounded in $L^p(Q,\mathbb{R}^2)$ in general.
The scaled sequence
$ \frac{{\mu^{1/p}}}{\varepsilon}\chi_1^{\varepsilon}{u^\varepsilon}$
 converges strongly to zero in $L^p(Q)$ as $\varepsilon\to 0$ since
$\|\chi_1^{\varepsilon}{u^\varepsilon}\|_{L^p(Q)}\leq  C$.
Thus, hereafter, we shall consider only the most interesting
cases $\gamma=0$ and $0<\gamma<\infty$.
}\end{remark}

\section{Homogenization in the case $\gamma=0$}

Since  $\gamma=0$ and
$\sup_\varepsilon\Bigl(\mu\|\nabla {u^\varepsilon}\|_{Q_1^\varepsilon}^p\Bigr) \leq C$,
the function
$$
\varepsilon\chi_1(\frac{x}{\varepsilon})\nabla_{\widetilde x}{u^\varepsilon}(t,x)
=\frac{\varepsilon}{{\mu^{1/p}}}{\mu^{1/p}}\chi_1(\frac{x}{\varepsilon})
\nabla_{\widetilde x}{u^\varepsilon}(t,x)
$$
converges strongly to zero in $ L^p(Q;\mathbb{R}^2)$. Thus
$\chi_1(y)\nabla_{\widetilde y} v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y})=0$, then
$$
\chi_1(y) v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y}):=u_1(t,x)
$$
and especially
  \begin{equation} \label{Ugamma=0}
U(t,x)=\theta_1u_1(t,x) +(1-\theta_1) u_2(t,x)+\int_{Y_3} w_3(t,x,y)dy.
\end{equation}
Moreover, the sequence
$$
\mu \chi_1^\varepsilon\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}(x,\nabla_{\widetilde x} u^\varepsilon)
=\mu^{1/p}\mu^{1/p'}\chi_1^\varepsilon\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}
(x,\nabla_{\widetilde x}u^\varepsilon)\to 0
$$
strongly in $L^{p'}(Q)$.

Now, for every datum  $Z\in\mathbb{R}^{3}$, let
\begin{equation}\label{a1hom}
\mathbb{A}_{13}^{\mathrm{hom}}(Z):=\int_{\widetilde{Y_1}}
\mathbb{A}_{13}(\widetilde y, Z)d{\widetilde y},
\end{equation}
and let $w_{2,Z}$ be the unique solution ($v_2$) of the following
cellular problem
\begin{equation}\label{cell12}
\begin{gathered}
 -\operatorname{div}_{y}\Bigl(\mathbb{A}_2 (y,Z+ \nabla_y{w_{2,Z}}) \Bigr)=0
\quad \text{in }Y_2 \\
 \mathbb{A}_2 (y,Z+ \nabla_y{w_{2,Z}}).n(y)=0 \quad  \text{on }{Y_{2 3}}\\
y\mapsto{w_{2,Z}}(y),\quad
  \mathbb{A}_2 (y,Z+ \nabla_y{w_{2,Z}}).n(y)
\big|_{\partial Y_2\cap \partial Y}  \quad
Y-\text{periodic},
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
we define the function
\begin{equation}
\label{a2hom}
\mathbb{A}_{2}^{\mathrm{hom}}(Z):=\int_{Y_2}
\mathbb{A}_{2}(y,Z +\nabla_y{w_{2,Z}}(t,x,y))dy.
\end{equation}

 \begin{theorem}\label{thm1}
The functions
$(u_\alpha,w_3)\in L^p(0,T; V)\times L^p(Q; W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_3))$,
$\alpha=1,2$ are the unique solutions of the  homogenized
coupled problems
  \begin{equation}\label{hom11}
 \begin{gathered}
\begin{aligned}
&\widetilde {c_1}\frac{\partial { u_1}}{\partial t}(t,x)
      -\partial_{x_3}\big(\mathbb{A}_{13}^{\mathrm{hom}}
(\partial_{x_3}{u_1}(t,x))\big)\\
&+ \int_{Y_{13}}   \mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_yw_3(t,x,y)) n_3(y)  dS(y)
 =  \theta_1 f  \quad \text{in }Q
\end{aligned}\\
\begin{aligned}
&\widetilde {c_2}\frac{\partial { u_2}}{\partial t}(t,x)
 -\operatorname{div}_x\big(\mathbb{A}_{2}^{\mathrm{hom}}(\nabla_x{u_2}(t,x))\big)\\
&+ \int_{Y_{23}} \mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_yw_3(t,x,y)) n_3(y) dS(y)
=  \theta_2 f \quad \text{in }Q
\end{aligned}\\
\widetilde {c_\alpha}{u_\alpha}(0,x)=\widetilde {c_\alpha}u_0(x)
\quad  \text{in }\Omega ,\quad
\widetilde{c_\alpha}=\int_{Y_\alpha} c_\alpha(y)dy,
\\
{u_\alpha}(t,x)=0 \quad  \text{on }\Gamma_{LB}
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
and
\begin{equation}\label{homY3var}
 \begin{gathered}
 { c_3} (y)(\frac{\partial { u_2}}{\partial t}(t,x)
+\frac{\partial { w_3}}{\partial t}(t,x,y))
- \operatorname{div}_y\Bigl( \mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_yw_3(t,x,y)) \Bigr)   = f \quad
  \text{in }Y_3
\\
{w_3}(t,x,y)=u_1(t,x)-u_2(t,x)\quad  \text{on }Y_{13}\\
 {w_3}(t,x,y)=0 \quad  \text{on }Y_{23}
\\
{c_3}(y){w_3}(0,x,y)={c_3}(y)(u_0(x)-u_2(0,x)),\quad  y\in Y_3\\
y\mapsto \mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_yw_3(t,x,y)).n(y)
\big|_{\partial Y\cap \partial Y_3} \quad Y-\text{periodic}
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
\end{theorem}

\begin{remark} {\rm
Let us comment on these results. These problems involve,
roughly speaking, three coupled fields :  two macroscopic
functions  ($u_1,u_2$) and a microscopic one $w_3$. Notice that,
only the longitudinal heat flux in the fiber is shown to be the
unique factor contributing on the effective behavior of the
composite (see second term of the first equation in \eqref{hom11}).
Moreover, the auxiliary problem \eqref{homY3var} is defined on
the surrounding coating ($Y_3$) of the coated fiber
($\overline{Y_1}\cup Y_3$). Besides, there is no
heat flux exchange across  the fiber-coating interface.
}\end{remark}

\subsection*{Proof of Theorem \ref{thm1}}

Let $C^1_{LB}(\overline{\Omega})
=\{v \in C^1(\overline{\Omega}):v=0\text{ on }\Gamma_{LB}\}$.
We shall consider test functions  $\psi_\alpha,\psi,\phi_2$ defined
as follows:
\begin{gather*}
\psi_\alpha(t,x)\in W^{1,p}(0,T; C^1_{LB}(\overline{\Omega})) \\
\psi(t,x,y)\in W^{1,p}(0,T; C^1_{LB}(\overline{\Omega};
\mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(Y))),\quad
\psi(t,x,y)=  \psi_\alpha(t,x)\quad\text{in $Y_\alpha$  a.e.} \\
\phi_2(t,x,y)\in   {\mathcal D}(Q;\mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(Y))
\end{gather*}
We define the function
$v^\varepsilon(t,x)=\psi(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})
+\varepsilon\phi_2(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})$.
Then  $v^\varepsilon\in W^{1,p}(0,T; V)$, hence $v^\varepsilon$ is an allowable
test function. By putting it in the formulation
\eqref{formulation-faible}, using the fact that
$\mu=\mu^{1/p'}\mu^{1/p}$  and letting
$\varepsilon\to 0$, we obtain
\begin{align}
&-\sum_{\alpha=1}^2  \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_\alpha}
c_\alpha (y)u_\alpha(t,x) \psi_\alpha'(t,x) \,dt\,dx\,dy 
\nonumber\\
&- \sum_{\alpha=1}^2 \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y\alpha}
 c_\alpha (y)u_0(x) \psi_\alpha(0,x) \,dx\,dy
\nonumber \\
&+ \sum_{\alpha=1}^2 \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y\alpha}
c_\alpha^{1/2} (y)u_\alpha^*(x,y) \psi_\alpha(T,x) \,dx\,dy
\nonumber \\
& - \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3 (y)\Bigl[u_2(t,x)+w_3(t,x,y)
 \Bigr]\psi'(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\nonumber \\
&- \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3 (y)u_0(x)\psi(0,x,y) \,dx\,dy
\label{cv}\\
&+  \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_3}  c_3^{1/2} (y)u_3^*(x,y)\psi(T,x,y)
 \,dx\,dy
 + \int_{Q}  \int_{ Y_1}   g_{13}(t,x, y).\partial_{x_3}\psi_1(t,x)
 \,dt\,dx\,dy
\nonumber \\
&+ \int_{Q} \int_{Y_2}  g_2(t,x,y).\Bigl[ \nabla_x \psi_2(t,x)
 +\nabla_y\phi_2(t,x,y)\Bigr] \,dt\,dx\,dy
\nonumber \\
&+\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3} g_3(t,x,y). \nabla_y\psi(t,x,y) \,dt\,dx\,dy
\nonumber \\
&=\sum_\alpha\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_\alpha}  f (t,x)
\psi_\alpha(t,x) \,dt\,dx\,dy
 +\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}    f (t,x)\psi(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy. \nonumber
\end{align}

(i) Take  $\psi_1=0= \psi_2$ and   $\phi_2=0$. Then
\begin{align*}
&-    \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}    c_3(y)\Bigl[u_2(t,x)+w_3(t,x,y)\Bigr]
 \psi'(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&-   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_3}    c_3(y)u_0(x)\psi(0,x,y) \,dx\,dy
 +   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3^{1/2} (y)u_3^*(x,y)\psi(T,x,y)
 \,dx\,dy
\\
& +   \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}    g_3(t,x,y).
 \nabla_y\psi(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&=\int_{\Omega_T}  \int_{Y_3}   f (t,x)\psi(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\end{align*}
 for all
$\psi\in W^{1,p}(0,T; C^1_{LB}(\overline{\Omega};
\mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(Y)))$ with $\psi(t,x,.)=0$ in
$Y_1\cup Y_2$. This remains true, by density, for all
$\psi \in W^{1,p}_{LB}(\Omega;W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y)) $,  $\psi=0$ on
$Y_1\cup Y_2$. For a.e. $x\in\Omega$, we have, thus, a cellular
problem on $Y_3$:
Find $w_3=w_3(.,x,.)\in L^{p}((0,T); W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y))$ such that
\begin{equation}\label{hom11Y3proof}
\begin{split}
&- \int_0^{T} \int_{Y_3} c_3(y)\Bigl[u_2(t,x)+w_3(t,x,y)\Bigr]\psi'(t,y)\,dt\,dy\\
&-  \int_{Y_3}  c_3(y)u_0(x)\psi(0,y)dy\\
&+ \int_{Y_3}c_3^{1/2} (y)u_3^*(x,y)\psi(T,y)  dy
+ \int_0^{T}  \int_{Y_3}  g_3(t,x,y). \nabla_y \psi(t,y) \,dt\,dy \\
&= \int_0^{T}  \int_{Y_3}    f (t,x)\psi(t,y)\,dt\,dy,
\end{split}
\end{equation}
for all $\psi(t,y) \in W^{1,p}((0,T); W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y))$,
with $\psi=0$ on $Y_1\cup Y_2$.

Integrating by parts in $t$ and in $y$ successively,
we obtain
\begin{align*}
&\int_0^{T}  \int_{Y_3}    c_3(y)\frac{\partial}{\partial t}
\Bigl[u_2(t,x)+w_3(t,x,y)\Bigr]\psi(t,y)\,dt\,dy  \\
&+  \int_{Y_3}  c_3(y)(u_0(x)-(u_2(0,x)+w_3(0,x,y)))\psi(0,y)dy\\
&-\int_{Y_3}  c_3(y)(u_2(T,x)+w_3(T,x,y))\psi(T,y)dy
 + \int_{Y_3}   c_3^{1/2} (y)u_3^*(x,y)\psi(T,y) dy\\
&- \int_0^{T}  \int_{Y_3}  \operatorname{div}_y\Bigl( g_3(t,x,y) \Bigr)
 \psi(t,y) \,dt\,dy \\
&+\int_0^{T}  \int_{\partial Y\cap \partial Y_3}
 \Bigl( g_3(t,x,y) \Bigr).n(y) \psi(t,y) dtdS(y)\\
&=  \int_0^{T}  \int_{Y_3}    f (t,x)\psi(t,y)\,dt\,dy.
\end{align*}
 This is the variational form of an evolution problem on
$Y_3$ which we write in a more explicit form ($x$ is a parameter):
 Find $w_3\in L^p(Q; W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_3))$ such that
$c_3(y)w_3'\in L^p(Q; (W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_3)))$ and
\begin{gather} 
 c_3 (y)\Big(\frac{\partial { u_2}}{\partial t}(t,x)
+\frac{\partial { w_3}}{\partial t}(t,x,y)\Big)
- \operatorname{div}_y\Bigl( g_3(t,x,y) \Bigr)  = f \quad  \text{in }Y_3
 \nonumber \\
{w_3}(t,x,y)=u_1(t,x)-u_2(t,x)\quad  \text{on }Y_{13} \nonumber \\
{w_3}(t,x,y)=0 \quad  \text{on }Y_{23}
\label{hom11Y3proofvar} \\
{c_3}(y){w_3}(0,x,y)={c_3}(y)(u_0(x)-u_2(0,x))\quad  y\in Y_3 \nonumber \\
y\mapsto  g_3(t,x,y).n(y)\big|_{\partial Y\cap \partial Y_3} \quad
 Y-\text{periodic} \nonumber
\end{gather}
and the final condition
$$
c_3^{1/2} (y)u_3^*(x,y)=c_3(y)(u_2(T,x)+w_3(T,x,y))
$$
which is however not a part of the problem. It will be only
used below to identify the functions $ g_{13},g_2,g_3$.


(ii) Taking now $\phi_2=0$ and $ \psi=0$ in $Y_3\cup Y_1$, and
using an integration by parts  and the initial and final
 conditions satisfied by $w_3$, we have
\begin{equation}\label{hom11Y2proof}
\begin{split}
&-  \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_2} c_2(y)u_2(t,x) \psi_2'(t,x) \,dt\,dx\,dy
- \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_2} c_2(y)u_0(x) \psi_2(0,x)\,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_2} c_2^{1/2}(y)u_2^*(x,y)
 \psi_2(T,x)\,dx\,dy\\
&+ \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_2}   g_2(t,x,y)\bigl[ \nabla_x{{\psi_2(t,x)}}
+\nabla_y{{\phi_2(t,x,y)}}\bigr] \,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \int_{Q}   \int_{Y_{23}} g_3(t,x,y).n(y)\psi_2\,dt\,dx\,dS(y)\\
&=  \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_2}   f  \psi_2 \,dt\,dx\,dy.
\end{split}
\end{equation}
Taking $\phi_2=0$ and $\psi_2$ arbitrary in $ W^{1,p}(0,T;V)$,
we obtain the variational form of the following initial-boundary
value problem in $Q$:
  \begin{gather}
\widetilde {c_2}\frac{\partial { u_2}}{\partial t}(t,x)
-\operatorname{div}_x\Bigl(\int_{  Y_{2}}   g_2(t,x,y) dy\Bigr)
 \int_{Y_{23}}    g_3(t,x,y).n(y) dS(y)
 = \theta_2 f  \quad \text{in }Q
\nonumber \\
 \widetilde {c_2}{u_2}(0,x)=\widetilde {c_2}u_0(x)\quad
\text{in }\Omega,\quad \tilde{c_2}=\int_{Y_2}{c_2}(y)dy
\label{hom11proof}\\
{u_2}(t,x)=0 \quad  \text{on }\partial \Omega \nonumber
\end{gather}
and the final condition
$$
\widetilde {c_2}{u_2}(T,x)=\int_{Y_2}c^{1/2}(y)u_2^*(x,y)dy.
$$
Now, taking $\psi_2=0$ and $\phi_2$ arbitrary in
$  {\mathcal D}(Q;W^{1,p}_{\sharp}(Y_2))$, we  have
$$
\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_2}   g_2(t,x,y) \nabla_y\phi_2(t,x,y)
\,dt\,dx\,dy=0,
$$
by integration by parts in $y$, we obtain
$$-
\int_{  Y_{2}}   \operatorname{div}_y\Bigl(g_2(t,x,y) \Bigr)dy
+ \int_{Q}  \int_{\partial Y_2}   g_2(t,x,y).n(y)
\phi_2(t,x,y)  \,dt\,dx\,dS(y)=0
$$
for a.e. $(t,x)\in Q$. This remains true, by density,
for all $\phi_2\in L^p(Q;W^{1,p}_{\sharp}(Y_2))$ and gives
for each  $(t,x)\in Q$ the variational formulation of a cellular
problem on $Y_2$,
 \begin{equation}\label{hom11celly2}
\begin{gathered}
-\operatorname{div}_y\Bigl(g_2(t,x,y) \Bigr)=0\quad\text{in }Y_2\\
 \Bigl( g_2(t,x,y) \Bigr).n(y)\big|_{{\partial Y_2\cap \partial Y_3}}
 =0\\
y\mapsto   g_2(t,x,y).n(y)\big|_{{\partial Y\cap \partial Y_3}} \quad
 Y-\text{periodic}
 \end{gathered}
\end{equation}
Similarly,  for all $\psi_1\in W^{1,p}(0,T;W_{LB}^{1,p}(\Omega))$,
we obtain
   \begin{equation}\label{hom11Y1proof}
\begin{split}
&-  \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_1}    c_1(y)u_1(t,x) \psi_1'(t,x) \,dt\,dx\,dy
-  \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_1} c_1(y)u_0(x) \psi_1(0,x)\,dx\,dy
\\
&+   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_1} c_1^{1/2}(y)u_1^*(x,y) \psi_1(T,x)
 \,dx\,dy\\
&+  \int_{Q} \int_{\widetilde Y_1}  g_{13}(t,x, y)
 \partial_{x_3}{\psi_1}(t,x) \,dt\,dxd{\widetilde y}\\
&+ \int_{Q}   \int_{Y_{13}}     g_3(t,x,y).n(y) dS(y)\\
&=  \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_1}   f  \psi_1 \,dt\,dx\,dy,
\end{split}
\end{equation}
which is the variational formulation of the following
initial-boundary value problem in $Q$.
\begin{equation}\label{hom1Y1proof}
\begin{gathered}
\widetilde {c_1}\frac{\partial { u_1}}{\partial t}(t,x)
 -  \partial_{x_3}({ g_{13}}(t,x,y))
 + \int_{Y_{13}}  g_3(t,x,y).n(y) dS(y)
 =  \theta_1 f \quad \text{in }\Omega  \\
\widetilde {c_1}{u_1}(0,x)=\widetilde {c_1}u_0(x)\quad  \text{in }\Omega,
\quad \tilde{c_1}=\int_{Y_1}{c_1}(y)dy
\\
{u_1}(t,x)=0 \quad  \text{on }\partial \Omega
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
and the final condition
$$
\widetilde {c_1}{u_1}(T,x)=\int_{Y_1}c^{1/2}(y)u_1^*(x,y)dy.
$$
From this,  we obtain the homogenized problem (\ref{hom11}).
It remains to identify $g_k$ in terms of $v_k,u_2$.
Before proceeding,  we  prove the following useful  identity.

\begin{lemma}\label{conservationofenery}
\begin{align*}
&\sum_{\alpha=1}^2\frac{1}{2} \widetilde c_\alpha
 \int_\Omega|u_\alpha(T,x)|^2dx+ \frac{1}{2}
 \int_\Omega\int_{Y_3}c_3(y)|v_3(T,x, y)|^2 dx\,dy \\
&-\frac{1}{2}\sum_{k=1}^3 \widetilde c_k\int_\Omega|u_0(x)|^2dx
+ \int_Q\int_{Y_1} g_{13}(t,x,y){\partial}_{x_3} u_1(t,x )\,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+   \int_Q\int_{Y_2} g_2(t,x,y)\Bigl(\nabla_{ x}u_2(t,x)
 +\nabla_{ y} v_2(t,x, y) \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}    g_3(t,x,y). \nabla_yv_3(t,x,y) \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
& =\int_Q  f(t,x)U(t,x)dt\,dx.
\end{align*}
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
 We start from the two-scale homogenized problem \eqref{cv} and
we consider the sequences
$$
\psi_{k, n},\ k=1,2,3,\quad    \phi_{2,n},\ \phi_{3,n}
$$
such that
\begin{enumerate}
\item $\psi_{\alpha, n}\to u_\alpha$ in $L^p(0,T;V)$,
 $\frac{\partial}{\partial t}\psi_{1, n}\to \frac{\partial}{\partial t}
 u_\alpha1$ in $L^{p'}(0,T;V')$, $\alpha=1,2,$
\item $\psi_{3,n}\to v_3$ in $L^p(0,T;W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_3))$,
 $\frac{\partial}{\partial t}\psi_{ 3,n}\to \frac{\partial}{\partial t}
 v_3$ in $L^{p'}(0,T;W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_3)')$,
\item $\nabla_y\phi_{2, n}\to \nabla_y v_2$ in $L^p(Q\times Y_2)$,
     $\nabla_y\phi_{3, n}\to \nabla_y v_3$ in $L^p(Q\times Y_3)$.
\end{enumerate}
Note that the smoothness of the above sequences $\psi_{k, n}$,
$k=1,2,3$,   $\phi_{2,n}$, $\phi_{3,n}$ implies their
two-scale convergence in strong sense to the corresponding limits
\cite[Theorem 1.8]{allaire}. Therefore, passing to the limit
with respect to $n$ and taking in account of the final conditions,
we obtain
\begin{align*}
&-\sum_{\alpha=1}^2  \int_{Q} \int_{Y_\alpha} c_\alpha
(y)u_\alpha(t,x) u_\alpha'(t,x) \,dt\,dx\,dy
- \sum_{k=1}^3 \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y\alpha}  c_k (y)u_0(x)^2 \,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \sum_{\alpha=1}^2 \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y\alpha}
c_\alpha (y) u_\alpha(T,x)^2 \,dx\,dy \\
&- \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3 (y)v_3(t,x,y)v_3'(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy
  +   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3 (y)v_3(T,x,y)^2 \,dx\,dy\\
&+ \int_{Q} \int_{ Y_1}   g_{13}(t,x, y).\partial_{x_3}u_1(t,x)
\,dt\,dx\,dy \\
&+ \int_{Q} \int_{Y_2}  g_2(t,x,y).\Bigl[ \nabla_x u_2(t,x)
+\nabla_yv_2(t,x,y)\Bigr] \,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+   \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}    g_3(t,x,y). \nabla_yv_3(t,x,y)
 \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&= \int_{Q}    f (t,x) U(t,x) \,dt\,dx.
\end{align*}
Integrating the above equality with respect to the $t$ variable,
we obtained the states result.
\end{proof}

We are now equipped  to identify $ g_{13},g_2$ and $g_3$.

\subsection*{Identification of $ g_{13},g_2$ and $g_3$}

Let $\phi$ and $\Phi$ be in $\mathcal{C}^\infty_0(Q;
\mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(Y))^N$ and \\
$\mathcal{C}^\infty_0(Q;
\mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(Y))$ respectively. For $\varepsilon>0$ and $h>0$
we define the  test function
 \begin{equation}
\begin{split}
 \eta^\varepsilon(t,x)&=\chi_1^\varepsilon(x)
\begin{pmatrix}
  0\\
 \partial_{x_3}
\end{pmatrix}
u_1(t,x)+\chi_2^\varepsilon(x)\nabla_{ x}u_2(t,x)\\
&\quad +\varepsilon\nabla_{ x}\phi(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})
+ h\Phi(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon}).
\end{split}
 \end{equation}
Note that $ \eta^\varepsilon$ and (by the continuity assumption)
$\mathbb{A}_k^\varepsilon(x, \eta^\varepsilon):=\mathbb{A}_k^\varepsilon(\frac{x}{\varepsilon},
\eta^\varepsilon(t,x))$, $ k=1,2,3$ are admissible test functions
(in $L^p(Q)$) for the two-scale convergence and
\begin{align*}
  \eta^\varepsilon(t,x)\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p'}}{\to }\eta(t,x,y)
&=:\chi_1(y)\begin{pmatrix}
      0\\
   \partial_{x_3}
 \end{pmatrix}
u_1(t,x)+\chi_2(y)\nabla_x u_2(t,x)\\
&\quad +\nabla_y\phi(t,x,y)+h\Phi(t,x,y).
\end{align*}
 The monotonicity condition (A6) yields
\begin{equation}\label{monotony}
 \int_Q\Bigl( \mathbb{A}^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_x u^\varepsilon(t,x))
-\mathbb{A}^\varepsilon(x,\eta^\varepsilon(t,x))\Bigr)\Bigl(\nabla_x u^\varepsilon(t,x)
-\eta^\varepsilon(t,x) \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\geq 0.
 \end{equation}
Expanding this expression and employing \eqref{tt}  yields
 \begin{align*}
&\int_0^T\int_\Omega f(t,x)u^\varepsilon(t,x)\,dx\,dt
- \frac{1}{2} \int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)u^\varepsilon(T,x)^2dx
 +\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x) (u^\varepsilon_0)^2dx\\
& -\int_Q\Bigl(\mathbb{A}^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_x u^\varepsilon(t,x))\eta^\varepsilon(t,x)
+ \mathbb{A}^\varepsilon(x,\eta^\varepsilon(t,x))(\nabla_x u^\varepsilon(t,x)
-\eta^\varepsilon(t,x))\Bigr)\,dt\,dx\geq 0.
\end{align*}
Letting $\varepsilon\to 0$, the two-scale convergence of $u^\varepsilon$
 and $\chi_k^\varepsilon\mathbb{A}_k^\varepsilon$ and the continuity of $\mathbb{A}_k$
give in the limit
\begin{align} 
&\int_Q f(t,x)U(t,x)\,dx\,dt-\liminf_{\varepsilon\to 0} \frac{1}{2}
 \int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)u^\varepsilon(T,x)^2dx
+\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega\int_Y c(y)dy (u_0)^2dx
\nonumber\\
&-  \int_Q\int_{Y_1} g_{13}(t,x,y)\Bigl(\partial_{x_3}u_1(t,x)
 +h\Phi_{N}(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\nonumber \\
&-  \int_Q\int_{Y_2}g_{2}(t,x,y)\Bigl( \nabla_xu_2(t,x)
 +\nabla_{ y}\phi(t,x,{ y})+h\Phi(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\nonumber \\
&-   \int_Q\int_{Y_3}g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigl( \nabla_{ y}\phi(t,x,{ y})
 +h\Phi(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy \label{eta}\\
&+  \int_Q\int_{Y_1}\mathbb{A}_{13}(x,\eta_{N}(t,x,y))
 \Bigl( \partial_{x_3}u_1(t,x)+h\Phi_{N}(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\nonumber\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_2}\mathbb{A}_{2}(x,\eta(t,x,y))\Bigl( -\nabla_xu_2(t,x)
 +\nabla_{ y}\phi(t,x,{ y})+h\Phi(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\nonumber\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_3}\mathbb{A}_{3}(x,\eta(t,x,y))
 \Bigl( \nabla_{ y}\phi(t,x,{ y})+h\Phi(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy  \geq 0.
\nonumber
\end{align}
Since $ \mathbb{A}_k $ is continuous we may replace
$\phi_\beta,\beta=2,3$ by a sequence converging
strongly in
$L^p(Q;W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_\beta)/\mathbb{R})$ to $v_\beta$;
thus replacing $\eta(t,x,y)$ in \eqref{eta} with
$\nabla_x u_2+\nabla_{y}v_2 +h\Phi $ and
$ \nabla_{y}v_3 +h\Phi $ successively and using
Lemma \ref{conservationofenery},  the above sum simplified to
\begin{align*}
&\int_Q\int_{Y_1}\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{13}\bigl(\widetilde y,\partial_{x_3}
u_1(t,x)+h\Phi(t,x,y)\bigr)- g_{13}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\Phi_{N}(t,x,y)
\,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+  \int_Q\int_{Y_2}\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{2}\bigl(x,\nabla_x u_2
 +\nabla_{y}v_2+h\Phi(t,x,y)\bigr)-g_{2}(t,x,y)\Bigr]
 h\Phi(t,x,y) \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_3}g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{3}
 \bigl(x,\nabla_{y}v_3+h\Phi(t,x,y)\bigr)-g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigr]
 h\Phi(t,x,y) \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&\geq  \frac{1}{2} \int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)u^\varepsilon(T,x)^2dx
+\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega\int_Y c(y)dy (u_0)^2dx\\
&\quad +\liminf_{\varepsilon\to 0}\Bigl[\frac{1}{2}
\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)u^\varepsilon(T,x)^2dx+\frac{1}{2}
 \int_\Omega\int_Y c(y)dy (u_0)^2dx\Bigr].
\end{align*}
Thus,  dividing by $h$ and letting $h\to 0$ we see that for
every $\Phi$,
\begin{equation}  \label{etah}
\begin{split}
&\int_Q\int_{Y_1}\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{13}\bigl(\widetilde y,
\partial_{x_3}u_1(t,x)- g_{13}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\Phi_{N}(t,x,y)
 \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_2}\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{2}\bigl(y,\nabla_x u_2
 +\nabla_{y}v_2\bigr)-g_{2}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\Phi(t,x,y) \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+   \int_Q\int_{Y_3}g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{3}
 \bigl(y,\nabla_{y}v_3\bigr)-g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\Phi(t,x,y)
\,dt\,dx\,dy
\geq      0.
\end{split}
\end{equation}
We therefore have proved the desired results, namely, that
\begin{gather*}
 g_{13}(t,x,y)=\mathbb{A}_{13}(\widetilde y,\partial_{ x_3}u_1(t,x))\\
 g_{2}(t,x,y)=\mathbb{A}_{2}(y,\nabla_x u_2(t,x)+\nabla_{ y}v_2(t,x,{ y}))\\
 g_{3}(t,x,y)=\mathbb{A}_{3}(y,\nabla_{ y}v_3(t,x,{ y}))
\end{gather*}
Hence equations \eqref{hom11}-\eqref{homY3var} are satisfied.
To complete the proof it suffices to show that
 $\{u_2,v_1,v_2,v_3\}$ is the unique solution of
\eqref{hom11}-\eqref{homY3var}. In fact, the uniqueness
is a consequence of the strict monotonicity of $\mathbb{A}_k,\ k=1,2,3$.
Indeed, if $\{u_2^1,v_1^1,v_2^1,v_3^1\}$ and
$\{u_2^2,v_1^2,v_2^2,v_3^2\}$ are two  solutions of
\eqref{hom11}-\eqref{homY3var}, using \eqref{cv},
by difference we obtain
\begin{align*}
&-\sum_{\alpha=1}^2  \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_\alpha}
c_\alpha (y)(u_\alpha^1-u_\alpha^2)  \psi_\alpha'  \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+ \sum_{\alpha=1}^2 \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y\alpha}
c_\alpha^{1/2} (y)({u_\alpha^*}^1-{u_\alpha^*}^2) \psi_\alpha(T,x)
\,dx\,dy
\\
&-    \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3 (y)(v_3^1-v_3^2)\psi' \,dt\,dx\,dy
 +   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3^{1/2} (y)
({v_3^*}^1-{v_3^*}^2)\psi  \,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \int_{Q}  \int_{ Y_1}  (\mathbb{A}_{13}(\widetilde y,
 \partial_{ x_3}u_1^1 )-\mathbb{A}_{13}(\widetilde y,
 \partial_{ x_3}u_1^2 )).\partial_{x_3}\psi_1   \,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \int_{Q} \int_{Y_2}  (\mathbb{A}_{2}(y,\nabla_x u_2^1
+\nabla_{ y}v_2^1 )-\mathbb{A}_{2}(y,\nabla_x u_2^2
+\nabla_{ y}v_2^2   )).(\nabla_x \psi_2 +\nabla_y\phi_2) \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+ \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}    (\mathbb{A}_{3}(y,\nabla_{ y}v_3^1 )
-\mathbb{A}_{3}(y,\nabla_{ y}v_3^2 )). \nabla_y\psi  \,dt\,dx\,dy=0.
\end{align*}
In particular, for $\psi_\alpha=u_\alpha^1-u_\alpha^2$,
$\phi_2=v_2^1-v_2^2$ and $\psi=v_3^1-v_3^2$, we obtain,
 in view of  the initial and final conditions satisfied by
$u_\alpha,v_3$ and by the strict monotonicity of
$\mathbb{A}_k$, $k=1,2,3$:
$$
\partial_{ x_3}(u_1^1-u_1^2)=0,\quad
\nabla_{ y}(v_3^1-v_3^2)=0\quad \text{in } Q\times {Y_3},
$$
  since $(u_1^1-u_1^2)=0$ on $(0,T)\times \Gamma_{LB}$ and
$(v_3^1-v_3^2)=0$ on $(0,T)\times {Y_{23}}$, thus $u_1^1=u_1^2$
and $v_3^1=v_3^2$. As a consequence,
  $$
\int_{Q} \int_{Y_2}  (\mathbb{A}_{2}(y,\nabla_x u_2^1
+\nabla_{ y}v_2^1 )-\mathbb{A}_{2}(y,\nabla_x u_2^2
+\nabla_{ y}v_2^2   )).(\nabla_x \psi_2
+\nabla_y\phi_2) \,dt\,dx\,dy=0,
$$
so  this problem has a unique solution in the space
$ W^{1,p}_{LB}(\Omega)\times L^p(\Omega; W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_2))$
by an application of Lax-Milligram lemma, then $u_2^1=u_2^2$
and $v_2^1=v_2^2$.


\section{Homogenization in the case $0<\gamma<\infty$}

In this case we shall proof the following result.

\begin{theorem}\label{thm2}
Functions    $(u_2,v_1,w_3)\in L^p(0,T; W^{1,p}_{LB}(\Omega))
\times  L^p(Q; W^{1,p}_\sharp(\widetilde Y_1)/\mathbb{R})
\times L^p(Q; W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_3))$ are the unique solutions of
the  two-scale homogenized  problems
  \begin{equation}
\label{hom1-gammaY2}
\begin{gathered}
\begin{aligned}
 &\widetilde {c_2}\frac{\partial { u_2}}{\partial t}
    -\operatorname{div}_x(\mathbb{A}_{2}^{\mathrm{hom}}(\nabla_x{u_2}(t,x)))\\
& + \int_{Y_{23}}   \mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_yw_3(t,x,y)).n_3(y) dS(y)
=   \theta_2 f  \quad \text{in }Q
\end{aligned} \\
 \widetilde {c_2}{u_2}(0,x)=\widetilde {c_2}u_0(x)\quad
 \text{in }\Omega ,\quad \widetilde{c_2}=\int_{Y_2} c_2(y)dy
\\
{u_2}(t,x)=0 \quad  \text{on }
(0,T)\times \partial \widetilde\Omega\times[0,1[
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
where $\mathbb{A}_{2}^{\mathrm{hom}}$ is define by \eqref{a2hom}.
\begin{equation}\label{hom1-gammaY13}
\begin{gathered}
\begin{aligned}
   & \langle  c_1  \rangle_{\mathrm I}({\widetilde y})
 \frac{\partial { v_1}}{\partial t}(t,x,{\widetilde y})
       -  \frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}} \operatorname{div}_{\widetilde y}
\big(\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}(\widetilde y,
\nabla_{\widetilde y}{v_1}(t,x,{\widetilde y}))\big)\\
& -  \partial_{x_3}(    \mathbb{A}_{13}(\widetilde y,
\partial_{x_3}v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y})))  =   f\quad  \text{in }
{\widetilde Y_1}
\end{aligned} \\
 { c_3} (y)\Big(\frac{\partial { u_2}}{\partial t}(t,x)
 +\frac{\partial { w_3}}{\partial t}(t,x,y)\Big)
 -  \operatorname{div}_y (\mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_yw_3(t,x,y)))    = f\quad
  \text{in } Y_3
\\
 \widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}(\widetilde y,
 \nabla_{\widetilde y}{v_1}).n(\widetilde y)={\gamma}^{1/p}
    \langle \mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_y w_3).n(y)
\rangle_{\mathrm I}\quad  \text{on }\widetilde Y_{13}
\\
{w_3}(t,x,y)=v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)-u_2(t,x)\quad  \text{on }Y_{13},
\quad  {w_3}(t,x,y)=0 \quad  \text{on }Y_{23}
    \\
\langle c_1\rangle _{\mathrm I} (\widetilde  y)v_1
=\langle c_1\rangle_{\mathrm I} (\widetilde  y) u_0,\quad
\widetilde y\in \widetilde Y_1
\\
{c_3}(y){w_3}(0,x,y)={c_3}(y)(u_0(x)-u_2(0,x)),\quad  y\in Y_3\\
y\mapsto \mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_yw_3(t,x,y)).n(y)
\big|_{{\partial Y\cap \partial Y_3}} \quad Y-\text{periodic}
 \end{gathered}
\end{equation}
where $\langle .\rangle_{\mathrm I}$ denotes the integration
with respect to $  y_3$ over ${\mathrm I}$.
\end{theorem}

 \begin{remark} \label {rkp}{\rm
Contrary to the previous case, here the problems
\eqref{hom1-gammaY2}-\eqref{hom1-gammaY13} involve  a unique
macroscopic function $u_2$ and two microscopic functions
$v_1,w_3$. The functions $v_1, w_3$ are ``strongly" coupled via
the following non-standard boundary conditions
\begin{gather}\label{transmission2}
{w_3}(t,x,y)-v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)=u_2(t,x)\quad
 \text{on }(0,T)\times Y_{13},
\\ \label{transmission1}
\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}(\widetilde y,
\nabla_{\widetilde y}{v_1}).n(\widetilde y)={\gamma}^{1/p}
    \langle \mathbb{A}_3(y,\nabla_y w_3).n(y)\rangle_{\mathrm I}
  \quad   \text{on }(0,T)\times \widetilde Y_{13}.
\end{gather}
As a consequence, the above interface conditions  exhibit
a remarkable    temperature   jump    and a   transverse heat
flux  continuity.
 This,  might be interpreted as the    combined effects of
fiber coatings together with  the  high  anisotropy  of
the fibers in the overall behavior of the composite.
In addition, it should be noted that the  auxiliary
problem   \eqref{hom1-gammaY13} is defined in the coated
fiber   $\overline{Y_1}\cup Y_3$ and   involves both
the longitudinal and  the transverse  thermal conductivities
of the fiber.
}\end{remark}

\subsection*{Proof of Theorem \ref{thm2}}

Let $\psi_2,\psi,\phi_2$ be   test functions as defined in the
proof of Theorem \ref{thm1} and let
 $$
\psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y)\in W^{1,p}(0,T; {C_{LB}^1}
(\overline{\Omega};\mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(\widetilde Y)))
$$
be a test function such that
$ \psi(t,x,y)=  \psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y)$ in $Y_1$  a.e.

 As in the previous case, we take
$v^\varepsilon(t,x)=   \psi(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})
+\varepsilon\phi_2(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})$ in
\eqref{formulation-faible} and letting $\varepsilon\to 0$, we deduce
the following  two-scale limit
\begin{align*}
&-\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_1} c_1 (y)v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)
 \psi_1'(t,x,\widetilde y) \,dt\,dx\,dy
- \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_1}  c_1 (y)u_0(x) \psi_1(0,x,\widetilde y)
  \,dx\,dy\\
&+   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_1}   c_1^{1/2} (y)u_1^*(x, y)
 \psi_1(T,x,\widetilde y) \,dx\,dy\\
&-  \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_2}    c_2 (y)u_2(t,x) \psi_2'(t,x) \,dt\,dx\,dy
- \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y2}  c_2 (y)u_0(x) \psi_2(0,x) \,dx\,dy\\
&+   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_2}   c_2^{1/2} (y)u_2^*(x,y)\psi_2(T,x)
\,dx\,dy\\
&-    \int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3 (y)\Bigl[u_2(t,x)+w_3(t,x,y)\Bigr]
 \psi'(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy\\
& -   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3 (y)u_0(x)\psi(0,x,y) \,dx\,dy\\
&+   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_3}   c_3^{1/2} (y)u_3^*(x,y)\psi(T,x,y)
\,dx\,dy\\
&+\frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}}\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_1}
 \widetilde g_1(t,x,y)\nabla_{\widetilde y}\psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y)
\,dt\,dxd{ y}\\
& +\int_{Q}  \int_{ Y_1}   g_{13}(t,x, y)\partial_{x_3}
 \psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y) \,dt\,dxd{ y}
\\
&+ \int_{Q} \int_{Y_2}  g_2(t,x,y)\Bigl[ \nabla_x \psi_2(t,x)
+\nabla_y\phi_2(t,x,y)\Bigr] \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
 & +\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}    g_3(t,x,y)  \nabla_y\psi(t,x,y)
\,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&=\int_{Q}  \int_{ Y_1}   f (t,x)  \psi_1(t,x) \,dt\,dxd {y}+
\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_2}   f (t,x)  \psi_2(t,x) \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&\quad +\int_{Q}  \int_{Y_3}    f (t,x)\psi(t,x,y)\,dt\,dx\,dy.
\end{align*}

(i) We choose   $\psi_1=0= \psi_2$ and   $\phi_2=0$. Then, we have
the cellular problem in $Y_3$.


(ii) Taking $\phi_2=0$ and $\psi_2=0$  and an integration by parts
with respect to $x_3$, we obtain
\begin{align*}
&\int_{Q} \int_{ Y_1}   g_{13}(t,x,y)\partial_{x_3}\psi_1
(t,x,\widetilde y) \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&= \int_{Q} \int_{\widetilde Y_1}  (\int_{\mathrm I}
 g_{13}(t,x,y)d{y_3})\partial_{x_3}\psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y)
\,dt\,dx\,d{\widetilde y}\\
 &=  -\int_{Q}  \int_{\widetilde Y_1}
\partial_{x_3}(\int_{\mathrm I}   g_{13}(t,x,y)d{y_3})
\psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y) \,dt\,dx\,d{\widetilde y}.
\end{align*}
After integration by parts with respect to $t$ and
${\widetilde y}$ successively we have
  \begin{align}
&\int_{Q}  \int_{\widetilde Y_1}
\langle c_1\rangle _{\mathrm I} (\widetilde  y)v_1'(t,x,\widetilde y)
\psi_1 \,dt\,dxd{\widetilde y}
- \int_{\Omega}  \int_{\widetilde Y_1}  \langle c_1\rangle _{\mathrm I}
(\widetilde  y)\Bigl(u_0(x)-v_1(0,x,\widetilde y)\Bigr)
\psi_1 dx\,d{\widetilde y}
\nonumber\\
&+   \int_{\Omega}  \int_{Y_1}  \Bigl( c_1^{1/2} (y)u_1^*(x, y)
- \langle c_1\rangle _{\mathrm I} (\widetilde  y)v_1(T,x,\widetilde y)
\Bigr)\psi_1(T,x,\widetilde y) \,dx\,dy
\nonumber\\
&-\frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}} \int_{Q}
 \int_{\widetilde Y_1}  \operatorname{div}_{\widetilde y}
 \bigl(\widetilde g_1(t,x, y)\bigr)\psi_1  d{\widetilde y}\,dt\,dx
\nonumber \\
& -\frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}}\int_{Q}
 \int_{\widetilde Y_{13}}   \widetilde g_1(t,x,y).n(y)\psi_1
 dS({\widetilde y}) \,dt\,dx
\label{hom1-gammaY2proof} \\
& -\int_{Q} \int_{\widetilde Y_1}  \partial_{x_3} \langle g_{13}
 (t,x,y)\rangle_{\mathrm I} (\widetilde  y) \psi_1
 \,dt\,dx\,d{\widetilde y}
\nonumber \\
&+ \int_{Q} \int_{\widetilde Y_{13}} \langle g_3(t,x,y) .n(y)
\rangle_{\mathrm I} (\widetilde  y)\psi_1\,dt\,dx\,dS(\widetilde y)
\nonumber\\
&=  \int_{Q}  \int_{\widetilde Y_1}   f  \psi_1
\,dt\,dx\,d{\widetilde y} \nonumber
\end{align}
 for all $\psi_1\in W^{1,p}\big(0,T;C^1_{LB}(\overline{\Omega};
\mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(\widetilde  Y_1))\big)$. Thus,  we get
 the   cell problem in ${\widetilde Y_1}$ \eqref{hom1-gammaY13}.

 (iii) Taking  $(\psi_1=0$, $\phi_2=0)$, then
$(\psi_1=0, \psi_2=0)$   we obtain the  initial-boundary value
problem \eqref{hom1-gammaY2}.


It remains to identify   $\widetilde g_1$ and $ g_{13}$.
This is done as in the preceding case. More precisely,
let $\phi(t,x,y)$, $\Phi(t,x,y)$  and $\psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y)$
be in $\mathcal{C}^\infty_0(Q; \mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(Y))^N$,
$\mathcal{C}^\infty_0(Q; \mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(Y))$ and
$\mathcal{C}^\infty_0(Q; \mathcal{C}^\infty_\sharp(\widetilde Y_1))$
respectively. For $\varepsilon>0$ and $h>0$ we define the following test
function
\begin{align*}
 \eta^\varepsilon(t,x)
&=\chi_1^\varepsilon(x)\nabla^\varepsilon_x\psi_1(t,x,\frac{\widetilde x}{\varepsilon})
+\chi_2^\varepsilon(x)\nabla_{ x}u_2(t,x)\\
&\quad +\varepsilon(1-\chi_1^\varepsilon(x))\nabla_{ x}\phi(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})
+ h\Phi(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon}),
\end{align*}
 where
\begin{equation}\label{delta-epsilon}
\nabla^\varepsilon_x=\begin{pmatrix}
   \varepsilon \nabla_{\widetilde x}  \\
    \partial_{x_3}
 \end{pmatrix}.
\end{equation}
 Note that
$\mathbb{A}_k^\varepsilon(x, \eta^\varepsilon):=\mathbb{A}_k^\varepsilon(\frac{x}{\varepsilon},
\eta^\varepsilon(t,x))$, $k=1,2,3$ are admissible test functions
(in $L^p(Q)$) for the two-scale convergence and
$$
  \eta^\varepsilon(t,x)\stackrel{\mathit{2s , p'}}{\to }\eta(t,x,y),
$$
where
\begin{align*}
 \eta(t,x,y)
&= \chi_1(y)\begin{pmatrix}
     \nabla_{\widetilde y}  \\
    \partial_{x_3}
 \end{pmatrix}
 \psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y)+\chi_2(y)\nabla_x u_2(t,x)\\
&\quad +(1-\chi_1(y))\nabla_y\phi(t,x,y)+h\Phi(t,x,y).
\end{align*}
Using monotonicity condition (A6) and letting $\varepsilon\to 0$,
exactly as in the previous case, we obtain
\begin{align*} %\label{eta2}
&\int_Q f(t,x)U(t,x)\,dx\,dt-\liminf_{\varepsilon\to 0} \frac{1}{2}
\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)u^\varepsilon(T,x)^2dx
+\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega\int_Y c(y)dy (u_0)^2dx
\\
&-\frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}}  \int_Q\int_{Y_1}\widetilde g_{1}(t,x,y)
\Bigl(\nabla_{\widetilde y} \psi_1(t,x,{\widetilde y} )
+h\widetilde\Phi(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
& -  \int_Q\int_{Y_1} g_{13}(t,x,y)\Bigl(\partial_{x_3}
\psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y) +h\phi_3(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&-  \int_Q\int_{Y_2}g_{2}(t,x,y)\Bigl( \nabla_xu_2(t,x)
+\nabla_{ y}\phi(t,x,{ y})+h\Phi(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
& -   \int_Q\int_{Y_3}g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigl( \nabla_{ y}\phi(t,x,{ y})
 +h\Phi(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+  \frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}}\int_Q\int_{Y_1}
\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}(x,\eta(t,x,y))\Bigl( \nabla_{\widetilde y}
 \psi_1(t,x,{\widetilde y} )
 +h\widetilde\Phi(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_1}\mathbb{A}_{13}(x,\eta(t,x,y))
 \Bigl( -\partial_{x_3}\psi_1(t,x,\widetilde y)
 +h\phi_3(t,x,y)  \Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
& + \int_Q\int_{Y_2}\mathbb{A}_{2}(x,\eta(t,x,y))
\Bigl( -\nabla_xu_2(t,x)+\nabla_{ y}\phi(t,x,{ y})+h\Phi(t,x,y) \Bigr)
 \,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+   \int_Q\int_{Y_3}\mathbb{A}_{3}(x,\eta(t,x,y))
\Bigl( \nabla_{ y}\phi(t,x,{ y})+h\Phi(t,x,y)\Bigr)\,dt\,dx\,dy \geq 0.
\end{align*}
Now,  we may replace $\psi_1$ and $\phi_\beta,\beta=2,3$ by a
sequence converging  strongly in
$L^p(Q;W^{1,p}_\sharp(\widetilde Y_1)/\mathbb{R})$
and $L^p(Q;W^{1,p}_\sharp(Y_\beta)/\mathbb{R})$ to $v_1$ and $v_\beta$
respectively, thus replacing $\eta(t,x,y)$ in \eqref{eta}
with $\begin{pmatrix}
     \nabla_{\widetilde y}v_1  \\
    \partial_{x_3}v_1
 \end{pmatrix}$,
$\nabla_x u_2+\nabla_{y}v_2 +h\Phi $ and
$ \nabla_{y}v_3 +h\Phi $ successively. Using the conservation
of energy given by the lemma \ref{conservationofenery} adapted
to the present case,  the above sum simplified to
\begin{align*}
&\frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}}\int_Q\int_{Y_1}
\Bigl[\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}\bigl(\widetilde y,
\nabla_{\widetilde y}v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)
+h\widetilde\Phi(t,x,y)\bigr)-\widetilde g_{1}(t,x,y)\Bigr]
h\widetilde\Phi(t,x,y)  \,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_1}\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{13}\bigl(\widetilde y,
\partial_{x_3}v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)+h\phi_3(t,x,y)\bigr)
- g_{13}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\phi_3(t,x,y)  \,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_2}\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{2}\bigl(x,\nabla_x u_2
+\nabla_{y}v_2+h\Phi(t,x,y)\bigr)-g_{2}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\Phi(t,x,y)
\,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&+   \int_Q\int_{Y_3}g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{3}
\bigl(x,\nabla_{y}v_3+h\Phi(t,x,y)\bigr)-g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigr]
h\Phi(t,x,y) \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&\geq  \frac{1}{2} \int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)u^\varepsilon(T,x)^2dx
+\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega\int_Y c(y)dy (u_0)^2dx \\
&\quad +\liminf_{\varepsilon\to 0}\Biggl[\frac{1}{2}
\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x)u^\varepsilon(T,x)^2dx
+\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega\int_Y c(y)dy (u_0)^2dx\Biggr].
\end{align*}
 Thus dividing by $h$ and letting $h\to 0$ we see that for
every $\Phi$,
\begin{align*}
&\frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}} \int_Q\int_{Y_1}
\Bigl[\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}\bigl(\widetilde y,
\nabla_{\widetilde y}v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)\bigr)
-\widetilde g_{1}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\widetilde\Phi(t,x,y)
\,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_1}\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{13}\bigl(\widetilde y,
 \partial_{x_3}v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)\bigr)-g_{13}(t,x,y)\Bigr]
 h\phi_3(t,x,y)  \,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+  \int_Q\int_{Y_2}\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{2}\bigl(y,\nabla_x u_2
+\nabla_{y}v_2\bigr)-g_{2}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\Phi(t,x,y) \,dt\,dx\,dy
\\
&+ \int_Q\int_{Y_3}g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigl[\mathbb{A}_{3}
\bigl(y,\nabla_{y}v_3\bigr)-g_{3}(t,x,y)\Bigr] h\Phi(t,x,y)
 \,dt\,dx\,dy
     \geq      0.
\end{align*}
Thus,
\begin{gather*}
 \langle \widetilde g_{1}(t,x,y)\rangle_{\mathrm I}
=\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_{1}(\widetilde y,\nabla_{ \widetilde  y}
v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)),\\
\langle g_{13}(t,x,y)\rangle_{\mathrm I}=\mathbb{A}_{13}
(\widetilde y,\partial_{ x_3}v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)).
\end{gather*}
Therefore  we have proved the desired results.
Now, to complete the proof of Theorem \ref{thm2}
we shall show  the uniqueness of the solution following
exactly the same lines as in  the proof of Theorem \ref{thm1}.

\section{Corrector results}

Now, we prove corrector results for the gradients of temperature
and the corresponding flux under the stronger hypotheses
(A5')--(A6') of monotonicity. Let $u^\varepsilon$ be the solution of the
 problem \eqref{Pep}.
Let $v_1,u_2,v_2,v_3$ be as in Theorem \ref{thm1} (when $\gamma=0$
we recall that $v_1(t,x,\widetilde y)=u_1(t,x)$).
We define the sequences of functions
\begin{equation} \label{corrector1}
\begin{gathered}
\xi_1(t,x, y):=\chi_1(y)\nabla_{\widetilde y,x_3}
 v_1(t,x,{\widetilde y}),\\
 \xi_2(t,x,y):=\chi_2(y)(\nabla_x u_2(t,x)+\nabla_y v_2(t,x,y)),
\\
\xi_3(t,x,y):=\chi_3(y) \nabla_y v_3(t,x,y),\\
\xi_k^\varepsilon(t,x):=\chi_k^\varepsilon(x) \xi_k^\varepsilon(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon}),\ k=1,2,3,\\
\mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\xi):=\chi_1^\varepsilon(x)
\begin{pmatrix}
      \frac{\mu}{\varepsilon}{\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}}_1^\varepsilon(\widetilde x,\widetilde\xi) \\
  \quad \mathbb{A}_{13}^\varepsilon(\widetilde x,\xi_3)
 \end{pmatrix},
\\
 \mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon(x,\xi) := \chi_2^\varepsilon(x){\mathbb{A}}_2^\varepsilon
 (\widetilde x,\widetilde\xi),\\
  \mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\xi) := \chi_3^\varepsilon(x) {\varepsilon}^{p-1}
{\mathbb{A}}_3^\varepsilon(\widetilde x,\widetilde\xi),
\end{gathered}
\end{equation}
where $\nabla_{\widetilde y,x_3}=\begin{pmatrix}
      \nabla_{\widetilde y} \\
    \partial_{x_3}
 \end{pmatrix}$.
Note that $\mathbb{B}_k^\varepsilon$ satisfies the strong monotonicity
condition (A5'), since
$\frac{\mu}{\varepsilon}=\frac{\mu^{1/p}}{\varepsilon}\mu^{1/p'}\to 0$;
thus, for example, we have
\begin{equation} \label{bm}
\begin{split}
  |\mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\xi)-\mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\eta)|
&=  |{\varepsilon}^{p-1}\mathbb{A}_3^\varepsilon(x,\xi)
 - {\varepsilon}^{p-1}\mathbb{A}_3^\varepsilon(x,\eta)|\\
&\leq  K_1  {\varepsilon}^{p-1}(|\xi|+|\eta|)^{p-2}|\xi-\eta|\\
&\leq  K_1 (|\xi|+|\eta|)^{p-2}|\xi-\eta|.
\end{split}
\end{equation}
 In a similar manner, we get the same inequality for
 $\mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon$ and $\mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon$.

 \begin{theorem}\label{thm1-corrector}
If the functions, $\nabla _{\widetilde y} v_1$, $\nabla _y v_2$
and $\nabla _y v_3$ are admissible (cf. Definition \ref{cv12sp}),
 then
\begin{gather}\label{e11}
 \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\|\chi_1^\varepsilon (\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon
- \xi_1^\varepsilon) \|_{L^{p}(Q)}=0,
\\ \label{e12}
  \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\|\chi_2^\varepsilon (\nabla_xu
 - \xi_2^\varepsilon) \|_{L^{p}(Q)}=0,
\\ \label{e13}
  \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\|\chi_3^\varepsilon (\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon
 - \xi_3^\varepsilon) \|_{L^{p}(Q)}=0.
\\ \label{e23}
  \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\|\chi_k^\varepsilon (\mathbb{B}_k^\varepsilon(x, \nabla_xu^\varepsilon)
- \mathbb{B}_k^\varepsilon(x,\xi_k^\varepsilon)) \|_{L^{p'}(Q)}=0,\quad k=1,2,3.
\end{gather}
Where   $\nabla^\varepsilon$ is defined by \eqref{delta-epsilon}.
 \end{theorem}

Let us mention that the convergence \eqref{e11}-\eqref{e23}
means that, under hypotheses (A5')-(A6') and
$\nabla _{\widetilde y} v_1$, $\nabla _y v_2$ and $\nabla _y v_3$
are admissible, the oscillations of the sequences, in the above,
are all contained in the corresponding two-scale limits.
Moreover, the proof of this theorem is motivated by the approach
 based on the two-scale convergence.

Now, let us  introduce some more notation, functions and quantities
which we will use hereafter. We will use $M$ to denote a generic
constant which does not depend on $\varepsilon$, but probably on $p$,
$K_1$, $K_2$, $c_0$, $c$ and the $L^{p'}$ (resp. $L^p$)
norm of the data $f$ (resp. $u_0$). Let $\kappa\in ]0,1[$
be a constant and $\psi_k(t,x,y),\ k=1,2,3,$ be admissible
test functions such that
 \begin{equation}\label{admissible1}
 \|\nabla_{\widetilde y,x_3}v_1-\psi_1\|^p_{L^p(Q\times{Y_1})}
+\sum_{\alpha=2}^3\|\nabla_{y}v_\alpha
-\psi_\alpha\|^p_{L^p(Q\times{Y_\alpha})}\leq \kappa.
  \end{equation}
 Define the following functions:
 \begin{equation} \label{admissible2}
\begin{gathered}
 \eta_1^\varepsilon(t,x) := \chi_1^\varepsilon(x)(\nabla^\varepsilon_x u^\varepsilon(t,x)
+\psi_1(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})),
 \\
 \eta_2^\varepsilon(t,x) := \chi_2^\varepsilon(x)(\nabla_x u^\varepsilon(t,x)
+\psi_2(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon})),
 \\
 \eta_3^\varepsilon(t,x):= \chi_3^\varepsilon(x) \psi_3(t,x,\frac{x}{\varepsilon}).
 \end{gathered}
\end{equation}
 Note that the functions $ \eta_k^\varepsilon$ and
$\mathbb{B}_k^\varepsilon(x, \eta_k^\varepsilon)$, $k=1,2,3$ arise from admissible
test functions and we have the following two-scale convergence
(cf. Lemma \ref{lemmacv}):
 \begin{gather*}
    \eta_1^\varepsilon(t,x)
       \stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to }
    \eta_1(t,x,y):=\chi_1(y)(\nabla_{\widetilde y,x_3}v_1(t,x,y)+\psi_1(t,x,y)),
 \\
    \eta_2^\varepsilon(t,x)
       \stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to }
\eta_2(t,x,y):=\chi_2(y)  (\nabla_xu_2(t,x)+\psi_2(t,x,y)),
 \\
    \eta_3^\varepsilon(t,x)
       \stackrel{\mathit{2s , p}}{\to }
\eta_3(t,x,y):=\chi_3(y)   \psi_3(t,x,y),
 \\
    \mathbb{B}_k^\varepsilon(x,\eta_k^\varepsilon)
       \stackrel{\mathit{2s , p'}}{\to }
\chi_k(y) \mathbb{B}_k(y,\eta_k(t,x,y)),\ k=1,2,3,
  \end{gather*}
  where $\mathbb{B}_1(y,\eta)=  \begin{pmatrix}
     \nu{\widetilde{\mathbb{A}}_1}({\widetilde y},{\widetilde \eta}) \\
    \mathbb{A}_{13}({\widetilde y},\eta_{1N})
 \end{pmatrix}$,
 ($\nu=0$ if $\gamma=0$ and $\nu=\frac{1}{\gamma^{1/p}}$ else),
$\mathbb{B}_2=\mathbb{A}_2$ and  $\mathbb{B}_3=\mathbb{A}_3$.

  \begin{lemma}\label{c1}
\[
\sum_{k=1}^3\|\xi_k\|^p_{L^p(Q\times {Y_k})}
\leq\frac{c}{c_0}(\|f\|^{p'}_{L^{p'}(Q)}+\|u_0\|^{p}_{L^{p}(\Omega)}).
\]
\end{lemma}

The proof of the above lemma follows from the identity in
Lemma \ref{conservationofenery}  and assumption (A5).

\begin{lemma}\label{c2}
 Let $\xi_k$, $\eta_k$, $\mathbb{B}_k^\varepsilon$, $\xi^\varepsilon_k$,
$\eta^\varepsilon_k$, $\mathbb{B}_k$, $k=1,2,3$ be functions as defined above.
Then
 \begin{gather*}
 \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon
 (x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)- \mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\eta_1^\varepsilon)).
 (\nabla^\varepsilon u^\varepsilon -\eta_1)\,dx\,dt\leq {\mathbb E},\\
  \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\int_{Q_2^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon
 (x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)- \mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon(x,\eta_2^\varepsilon)).
 (\nabla u^\varepsilon -\eta_2)\,dx\,dt\leq {\mathbb E},\\
   \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\int_{Q_3^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon
 (x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)- \mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\eta_3^\varepsilon)).
 (\varepsilon\nabla u^\varepsilon -\eta_3)\,dx\,dt\leq {\mathbb E},
 \end{gather*}
 where
\[
{\mathbb E}:=\sum_{k=1}^3\int_{Q\times Y_{k}}
(\mathbb{B}_k(y,\xi_k)- \mathbb{B}_k(y,\eta_k)).(\xi_k -\eta_k)dy\,dx\,dt.
\]
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
  Firstly, we denote the integrals appearing in the left-side
of the above inequalities by ${\mathbb E}^\varepsilon_1$,
${\mathbb E}^\varepsilon_2$ and ${\mathbb E}^\varepsilon_3$ respectively. Secondly,
we  put
\begin{gather*}
\mathbb{D}^\varepsilon(T)
=\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x) u^\varepsilon(T,x)^2dx,\quad
 \mathbb{D}^\varepsilon(0)=\int_\Omega c^\varepsilon(x) u_0(x)^2dx,\\
\mathbb{D}^0(T)=\sum_{\alpha=1}^2\widetilde
 c_\alpha\int_\Omega|u_\alpha(T,x)|^2dx
+  \int_\Omega\int_{Y_3}c_3(y)|v_3(T,x, y)|^2\,dx\,dy
\\
\mathbb{D}^0(0)=\sum_{k=1}^3 \widetilde c_k\int_\Omega|u_0(x)|^2dx.
\end{gather*}
 Then, for $k=1,2,3$, using \eqref{tt}, we obtain
\begin{align*}
{\mathbb E}^\varepsilon_k & \leq  \sum_{j=1}^3{\mathbb E}^\varepsilon_j
   = \int_Qf(t,x)u^\varepsilon(t,x)\,dt\,dx+\frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^\varepsilon(0)
 -\frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^\varepsilon(T)\\
 &\quad -\sum_{j=1}^3 \int_{Q_3^\varepsilon} \mathbb{B}_j^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon).
 \eta_j^\varepsilon \,dt\,dx  -\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon} \mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\eta_1^\varepsilon) .
  (\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon-\eta_1^\varepsilon) \,dt\,dx\\
 &\quad   -\int_{Q_2^\varepsilon} \mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon(x,\eta_2^\varepsilon) .
(\nabla_xu^\varepsilon-\eta_2^\varepsilon) \,dt\,dx
- \int_{Q_3^\varepsilon} \mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\eta_3^\varepsilon) .
(\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon-\eta_3^\varepsilon) \,dt\,dx.
\end{align*}
Now, using the two-scale convergence, we deduce
\begin{align*}
\limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0} \sum_{j=1}^3{\mathbb E}^\varepsilon_j
&\leq  \int_{Q\times Y}f(t,x)U(t,x)\,dt\,dx\,dy
  +\frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^0(0)-\liminf_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\frac{1}{2}
 \mathbb{D}^\varepsilon(T)\\
&\quad   - \sum_{j=1}^3\int_{Q\times{Y_j}} \mathbb{B}_j(y,\xi_j) .
\eta_j  \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&\quad - \sum_{j=1}^3\int_{Q\times{Y_j}} \mathbb{B}_j(y,\eta_j) .
(\xi_j-\eta_j) \,dt\,dx\,dy.
\end{align*}
The right-hand side can be written as
\begin{align*}
&\int_{Q\times Y}f(t,x)U(t,x)\,dt\,dx\,dy
 +\frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^0(0)-\liminf_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}
 \frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^\varepsilon(T)\\
&-\sum_{j=1}^3\int_{Q\times{Y_j}} \mathbb{B}_j(y,\xi_j) .
\xi_j  \,dt\,dx\,dy \\
&+ \sum_{j=1}^3\int_{Q\times{Y_j}}
(\mathbb{B}_j(y,\xi_j)-\mathbb{B}_j(y,\eta_j)).(\xi_j-\eta_j)
\,dt\,dx\,dy.
 \end{align*}
From the energy identity (cf. Lemma \ref{conservationofenery})
we obtain
\begin{align*}
&\sum_{j=1}^3\int_{Q\times{Y_j}} \mathbb{B}_j(y,\xi_j) .
\xi_j  \,dt\,dx\,dy\\
&= \int_{Q\times Y}f(t,x)U(t,x)\,dt\,dx\,dy
 +\frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^0(0)+ \frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^0(T)\\
&\geq \int_{Q\times Y}f(t,x)U(t,x)\,dt\,dx\,dy
+\frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^0(0)
 -\liminf_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\frac{1}{2}\mathbb{D}^\varepsilon(T).
\end{align*}
This completes the proof.
\end{proof}

\begin{lemma}\label{c3}
 Let $\xi_k$, $\eta_k$,   $\kappa$ be   as defined above. Then
 $$
{\mathbb E}:=\sum_{k=1}^3\int_{Q\times Y_{k}}(\mathbb{B}_k(y,\xi_k)
- \mathbb{B}_k(y,\eta_k).(\xi_k -\eta_k)dy\,dx\,dt
\leq M\kappa^{2/p}.
$$
 \end{lemma}

 \begin{proof}
Using (A5') and H\"older's  inequality,
\begin{align*}
{\mathbb E}&\leq  \sum_{k=1}^3\int_{Q\times Y_{k}}
 (\mathbb{B}_k(y,\xi_k)- \mathbb{B}_k(y,\eta_k) (\xi_k -\eta_k)dy\,dx\,dt \\
&\leq  K_1\sum_{k=1}^3\int_{Q\times Y_{k}}(|\xi_k|
 +|\eta_k|)^{p-2} |\xi_k -\eta_k|^2dy\,dx\,dt \\
&\leq  K_1\sum_{k=1}^3\Big(\int_{Q\times Y_{k}}(|\xi_k|
  + |\eta_k|)^pdy\,dx\,dt\Big)^{\frac{p-2}{p}} \|\xi_k -\eta_k\|_{L^p }^2 \\
&\leq  K_1\sum_{k=1}^3(\|\xi_k\|_{L^p }+ \|\eta_k\|_{L^p })^{p-2}
  \|\xi_k -\eta_k\|_{L^p }^2\\
&\leq  K_1\Big(\sum_{k=1}^3 (\|\xi_k\|_{L^p }+ \|\eta_k\|_{L^p }
 )^{p}\Big)^{\frac{p-2}{p}}\Big(\sum_{k=1}^3 (\|\xi_k -\eta_k\|_{L^p }^p)
 \Big)^{2/p}\\
&\leq  K_1\Big(\sum_{k=1}^3 (2\|\xi_k\|_{L^p }+ \|\xi_k
 -\eta_k\|_{L^p })^{p}\Big)^{\frac{p-2}{p}}\Big(\sum_{k=1}^3 (\|\xi_k
 -\eta_k\|_{L^p }^p)\Big)^{2/p}\\
&\leq  K_1\Big(\sum_{k=1}^3 2^p(2^p\|\xi_k\|_{L^p }^p+ \|\xi_k
 -\eta_k\|_{L^p }^p)\Big)^{\frac{p-2}{p}}\Big(\sum_{k=1}^3 (\|\xi_k
 -\eta_k\|_{L^p }^p)\Big)^{2/p}.
\end{align*}
By the estimate proved in Lemma \ref{c1}, we deduce the result.
\end{proof}

Now, we prove some preliminary corrector results.

 \begin{theorem}\label{thm1bis-corrector}
 Under the same assumption as in Theorem \ref{thm1-corrector},
we have:
\begin{gather}
\label{limsup1}
\limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\|\chi_1^\varepsilon\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon
- \eta_1^\varepsilon \|_{L^{p}(Q)}\leq M\kappa^{2/p},
\\
 \label{limsup2}
 \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\|\chi_2^\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon
- \eta_2^\varepsilon \|_{L^{p}(Q)}\leq M\kappa^{2/p},
  \\
 \label{limsup3}
 \limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\|\chi_3^\varepsilon\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon
- \eta_3^\varepsilon \|_{L^{p}(Q)}\leq M\kappa^{2/p}.
\\
 \label{limsup11}
\limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\|\mathbb{B}_k^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)
- \mathbb{B}_k^\varepsilon(x,\eta_k^\varepsilon) \|_{L^{p'}(Q)}
\leq M\kappa^{2/(p-1)},\quad k=1,2,3.
\end{gather}
 \end{theorem}

\begin{proof}
From \eqref{bm},  we obtain
\begin{gather*}
|\chi_1^\varepsilon\nabla_x^\varepsilon u^\varepsilon(t,x)- \eta_1^\varepsilon(t,x)|^p
\leq \frac{1}{K_2}(\mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\eta_1^\varepsilon)).(
\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_1^\varepsilon),\\
|\chi_2^\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon(t,x)- \eta_2^\varepsilon(t,x)|^p
\leq \frac{1}{K_2}(\mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\eta_3^\varepsilon)).(\nabla_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_3^\varepsilon), \\
|\chi_3^\varepsilon\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon(t,x)- \eta_3^\varepsilon(t,x)|^p
\leq \frac{1}{K_2}(\mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\eta_3^\varepsilon)).(\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_3^\varepsilon).
\end{gather*}
Therefore,
\begin{gather*}
\|\chi_1^\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_1^\varepsilon\|^p_{L^p(Q_1^\varepsilon)}
\leq \frac{1}{K_2}\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\eta_1^\varepsilon)).(\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_1^\varepsilon)\,dt\,dx,\\
\|\chi_2^\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon - \eta_2^\varepsilon \|^p_{L^p(Q_2^\varepsilon)}
\leq \frac{1}{K_2}\int_{Q_2^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon(x,\eta_2^\varepsilon)).
(\nabla_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_2^\varepsilon)\,dt\,dx,\\
\|\chi_3^\varepsilon\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon - \eta_3^\varepsilon \|^p_{L^p(Q_3^\varepsilon)}
\leq \frac{1}{K_2}\int_{Q_3^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)
- \mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\eta_3^\varepsilon)).(\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_3^\varepsilon)\,dt\,dx.
\end{gather*}
Now, let
$$
\mathbb{G}^\varepsilon:=\|\chi_1^\varepsilon\nabla_x^\varepsilon u^\varepsilon
- \eta_1^\varepsilon\|^p_{L^p(Q_1^\varepsilon)}+\|\chi_2^\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon
- \eta_2^\varepsilon \|^p_{L^p(Q_2^\varepsilon)}+\|\chi_3^\varepsilon\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon
- \eta_3^\varepsilon \|^p_{L^p(Q_3^\varepsilon)},
$$
and
\begin{align*}
\mathbb{F}^\varepsilon
&:=\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\eta_1^\varepsilon)).(\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_1^\varepsilon)\,dt\,dx\\
&\quad  +\int_{Q_2^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon(x,\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_2^\varepsilon(x,\eta_2^\varepsilon)).(\nabla_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_2^\varepsilon)\,dt\,dx\\
&\quad  +\int_{Q_3^\varepsilon}(\mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\varepsilon\nabla_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_3^\varepsilon(x,\eta_3^\varepsilon)).(\nabla_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_3^\varepsilon)\,dt\,dx.
\end{align*}
From th above estimates, we have
$\mathbb{G}^\varepsilon\leq \mathbb{F}^\varepsilon/c_0$.
Therefore, passing to the limit-sup as $\varepsilon\to 0$ and using
Lemmas \ref{c2} and \ref{c3}, we obtain
$$
\limsup_{\varepsilon \searrow 0}\mathbb{G}^\varepsilon\leq M\kappa^{2/p}.
$$
This concludes the proof of \eqref{limsup1}-\eqref{limsup3}.
To achieve the proof, we will only prove the estimate
\eqref{limsup11} for $k=1$, the others are proved in a similar manner.
Let $q=p'=\frac{p}{p-1}$, then by \eqref{bm} we have
\begin{align*}
&\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}|\mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon)
- \mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\eta_1^\varepsilon)|^q\,dt\,dx\\
&\leq K_1 \int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}(|\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon|
+|\eta_1^\varepsilon|)^{(p-2)q}|\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_1^\varepsilon|^q\,dt\,dx.
\end{align*}
Since
$$
\frac{1}{p-1}+\frac{p-2}{p-1}=1,
$$
 by H\"older's inequality,
\begin{align*}
&\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}|\mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon)
 - \mathbb{B}_1^\varepsilon(x,\eta_1^\varepsilon)|^q\,dt\,dx\\
& \leq K_1 \Big(\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}(|\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon|
+|\eta_1^\varepsilon|)^p\,dt\,dx\Big)^{\frac{p-2}{p-1}}
\Big(\int_{Q_1^\varepsilon}|\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon-\eta_1^\varepsilon|^p\,dt\,dx
 \Big)^{\frac{1}{p-1}}\\
& \leq M \|\chi_1^\varepsilon(\nabla^\varepsilon_xu^\varepsilon- \eta_1^\varepsilon) \|_{L^{p}(Q)}^q.
\end{align*}
Now, using  \eqref{limsup1}, we obtain the desired estimate.
\end{proof}

\begin{proof}[\textbf{Proof of Theorem \ref{thm1-corrector}}]
Since  the functions  $\nabla _y v_2$ and $\nabla _y v_3$
are assumed to be  admissible test functions, we can choose
$\psi_1=\nabla _y v_2$ and $\psi_2=\nabla _y v_3$.
Therefore, $\kappa$ can be taken arbitrarily small and thus,
Theorem \ref{thm1-corrector} follows from
Theorem \ref{thm1bis-corrector}.
\end{proof}

\subsection*{Acknowledgments}
 The author would like to thank the anonymous referee
for his or her careful reading of the manuscript and the
helpful suggestions  to improve this article.

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 \end{document}
