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A theory of amorphous viscoelastic solids undergoing finite deformations with application to hydrogels
Institution:1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708-0287, USA;2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708-0287, USA
Abstract:We consider a hydrogel in the framework of a continuum theory for the viscoelastic deformation of amorphous solids developed by Anand and Gurtin Anand, L., Gurtin, M., 2003. A theory of amorphous solids undergoing large deformations, with application to polymeric glasses. International Journal of Solids and Structures, 40, 1465–1487.] and based on (i) a system of microforces consistent with a microforce balance, (ii) a mechanical version of the second law of thermodynamics and (iii) a constitutive theory that allows the free energy to depend on inelastic strain and the microstress to depend on inelastic strain rate. We adopt a particular (neo-Hookean) form for the free energy and restrict kinematics to one dimension, yielding a classical problem of expansion of a thick-walled cylinder. Considering both Dirichlet and Neumann boundary conditions, we arrive at stress relaxation and creep problems, respectively, which we consider, in turn, locally, at a point, and globally, over the interval. We implement the resulting equations in a finite element code, show analytical and/or numerical solutions to some representative problems, and obtain viscoelastic response, in qualitative agreement with experiment.
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