Elastic instabilities for strain-stiffening rubber-like spherical and cylindrical thin shells under inflation |
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Authors: | Landon M. Kanner |
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Affiliation: | Structural and Solid Mechanics Program, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA |
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Abstract: | This paper is concerned with investigation of the effects of strain-stiffening on the classical limit point instability that is well-known to occur in the inflation of internally pressurized rubber-like spherical thin shells (balloons) and circular cylindrical thin tubes composed of incompressible isotropic non-linearly elastic materials. For a variety of specific strain-energy densities that give rise to strain-stiffening in the stress-stretch response, the inflation pressure versus stretch relations are given explicitly and the non-monotonic character of the inflation curves is examined. While such results are known for constitutive models that exhibit a gradual stiffening (e.g. exponential and power-law models), our primary focus is on materials that undergo severe strain-stiffening in the stress-stretch response. In particular, we consider two phenomenological constitutive models that reflect limiting chain extensibility at the molecular level. It is shown that for materials with sufficiently low extensibility no limit point instability occurs and so stable inflation is then predicted for such materials. Potential applications of the results to the biomechanics of soft tissues are indicated. |
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Keywords: | Strain-stiffening constitutive models Incompressible rubber-like materials and soft biological tissues Inflation of spherical and cylindrical thin shells Instabilities |
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