CRACK SLOW PROPAGATION IN POWER-LAW NONLINEAR VISCOELASTIC INCOMPRESSIBLE MATERIALS

Author(s):  
Shuang-Yin ZHANG ◽  
Dian-Yuan XIONG
1970 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 1127-1133 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. C. Ting

Real solids are not incompressible, although many viscoelastic materials which undergo large deformations show only small changes in volume under ordinary loading conditions. This paper is concerned with a pressurized isotropic viscoelastic hollow cylinder bonded to an elastic casing in which, during a finite deformation, the dilatational change in any element of the cylinder is a small quantity. The analysis is based in part upon the theory of small deformations superposed on finite deformations. Numerical calculations are evaluated by using finite-difference techniques and assuming particular forms of kernel functions in the stress-strain relation. The results for compressible and incompressible materials are compared.


1966 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 313-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. C. Huang ◽  
E. H. Lee

Approximate constitutive equations for nonlinear viscoelastic incompressible materials under small finite deformation and for short time ranges are derived. The error bound of such a constitutive equation is investigated. Nonlinear creep is analyzed on the basis of the proposed equation, and also the problem of a pressurized viscoelastic hollow cylinder bonded to an elastic casing. Numerical solutions, evaluated by assuming particular forms of kernel functions in the constitutive equation, are obtained by means of an inverse interpolation technique, and the effects of nonlinearity of material properties are discussed. An experimental procedure is also proposed for measuring kernel functions from uniaxial tension tests for real materials.


2021 ◽  
pp. 107754632110065
Author(s):  
Hamid Aris ◽  
Habib Ahmadi

In this work, nonlinear forced vibrations of truncated conical shells are presented using a semi-analytical method. The material properties are varied along the thickness direction as a power law distribution. The functionally graded truncated conical shells are exposed to external harmonic load and placed in the thermal environment and have an initial imperfection. Furthermore, the functionally graded truncated conical shells rests on generalized nonlinear viscoelastic foundations which consisted of a Winkler and Pasternak foundation parameters augmented by a Kelvin–Voigt viscoelastic model and a nonlinear cubic stiffness. The fundamental equations are extracted using first-order shear deformation theory in conjunction with nonlinear von Kármán relationships. The partial differential equations of truncated conical shells are reduced through Galerkin’s method, and the result is extracted using the multiple scales method. To analyze the resonance analyses, a two-term external excitation is considered. In this regard, various secondary resonances are investigated, and finally, the analyses about combination resonances are represented. To investigate the presented approach, a comparison study is performed with those addressed by other researchers. To analyze the nonlinear combination resonance behavior of truncated conical shells, the effect of geometrical characteristics, material properties, power law index, thermal effects, external load amplitude, and initial imperfection are examined. Finally, the steady-state responses of the nonlinear system are analyzed. As one of the most interesting results, the softening behavior of truncated conical shells with inverse quadratic distribution is the most, and for the quadratic distribution is the least.


2006 ◽  
Vol 128 (4) ◽  
pp. 527-536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Marklund ◽  
Janis Varna ◽  
Lennart Wallström

In tensile tests the flax/polypropylene composites clearly show nonlinear behavior in loading and hysteresis loops in unloading. In creep tests performed at different load levels the response was nonlinear viscoelastic, and after recovery, viscoplastic strains were detected. No degradation in stiffness could be seen and thus nonlinear viscoelasticity and viscoplasticity were assumed to be the main cause for the observed behavior. The fracture surface of a specimen that experienced creep rupture at 24 MPa was investigated using a scanning electron microscope. The viscoplastic response was studied experimentally and described by a power law with respect to time and stress level in the creep test. The nonlinear viscoelasticity was described using Schapery’s model. The application of Prony series and a power law to approximate the viscoelastic compliance was investigated. Both descriptions have accuracy sufficient for practical applications. However, at high stresses the attempts to describe the viscoelastic compliance by a power law with a stress-independent exponent failed and therefore stress dependence of this exponent was included in the data analysis. The accuracy within the considered stress range is good, but the thermodynamic consistency of this procedure has to be proven.


1970 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. C. Ting

An approximate constitutive equation for nonlinear viscoelastic incompressible materials under small finite deformation and for short time ranges has been derived by Huang and Lee [1]. The resulting equation is applied to solve the problem of a pressurized viscoelastic hollow cylinder bonded to an elastic easing. This problem is of notable technical interest in solid propellant stress analysis, since it is a close model to represent a cylindrical propellant grain in a solid fuel rocket under firing condition. The method used by Huang and Lee is appropriate for numerical calculations when the boundaries of the cylinder are nonablating. To consider one step closer to the real situation, the inner surface is often assumed to be ablating and hence time-dependent. It is then the purpose of the present paper to extend the analysis to a cylinder with moving inner surface.


1999 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 289-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.R. Donnison ◽  
L.I. Pettit

AbstractA Pareto distribution was used to model the magnitude data for short-period comets up to 1988. It was found using exponential probability plots that the brightness did not vary with period and that the cut-off point previously adopted can be supported statistically. Examination of the diameters of Trans-Neptunian bodies showed that a power law does not adequately fit the limited data available.


1968 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Gill ◽  
Charles I. Berlin

The unconditioned GSR’s elicited by tones of 60, 70, 80, and 90 dB SPL were largest in the mouse in the ranges around 10,000 Hz. The growth of response magnitude with intensity followed a power law (10 .17 to 10 .22 , depending upon frequency) and suggested that the unconditioned GSR magnitude assessed overall subjective magnitude of tones to the mouse in an orderly fashion. It is suggested that hearing sensitivity as assessed by these means may be closely related to the spectral content of the mouse’s vocalization as well as to the number of critically sensitive single units in the mouse’s VIIIth nerve.


2007 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 157-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmen Hagemeister

Abstract. When concentration tests are completed repeatedly, reaction time and error rate decrease considerably, but the underlying ability does not improve. In order to overcome this validity problem this study aimed to test if the practice effect between tests and within tests can be useful in determining whether persons have already completed this test. The power law of practice postulates that practice effects are greater in unpracticed than in practiced persons. Two experiments were carried out in which the participants completed the same tests at the beginning and at the end of two test sessions set about 3 days apart. In both experiments, the logistic regression could indeed classify persons according to previous practice through the practice effect between the tests at the beginning and at the end of the session, and, less well but still significantly, through the practice effect within the first test of the session. Further analyses showed that the practice effects correlated more highly with the initial performance than was to be expected for mathematical reasons; typically persons with long reaction times have larger practice effects. Thus, small practice effects alone do not allow one to conclude that a person has worked on the test before.


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