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Dramatically stiffer elastic composite materials due to a negative stiffness phase?
Authors:RS Lakes  WJ Drugan
Institution:a Department of Engineering Physics, Engineering Mechanics Program, Materials Science Program, 1500 Engineering Drive, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA
b Rheology Research Center, 1500 Engineering Drive, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA
Abstract:Composite materials of extremely high stiffness can be produced by employing one phase of negative stiffness. Negative stiffness entails a reversal of the usual codirectional relationship between force and displacement in deformed objects. Negative stiffness structures and materials are possible, but unstable by themselves. We argue here that composites made with a small volume fraction of negative stiffness inclusions can be stable and can have overall stiffness far higher than that of either constituent. This high composite stiffness is demonstrated via several exact solutions within linearized and also fully nonlinear elasticity, and via the overall modulus tensor estimate of a variational principle valid in this case. We provide an initial discussion of stability, and adduce experimental results which show extreme composite behavior in selected viscoelastic systems under sub-resonant sinusoidal load. Viscoelasticity is known to expand the space of stability in some cases. We have not yet proved that purely elastic composite materials of the types proposed and analyzed in this paper will be stable under static load. The concept of negative stiffness inclusions is buttressed by recent experimental studies illustrating related phenomena within the elasticity and viscoelasticity contexts.
Keywords:Elastic material  Particle reinforced material  Phase transformation  Ferroelectric material  Composite material
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