Difference between revisions of "Mooney Material"
(Created page with "The Mooney-Rivilin material is an isotropic, elastic, hyperelastic material. It’s stresses are based on a strain energy function that depends only on invariants to the left ...") |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The Mooney- | == Constitutive Law == | ||
The Mooney-Rivlin material [[Material Models|Mooney-Rivlin]] is an isotropic, elastic, hyperelastic material. The constitutive law derived from a strain energy function that is a function of the deformation gradient tensor F. | |||
Regarding to the objectivity conditions and using the representation theorem,strain energy is represented by the invariants of a strain tensor, such as the left Cauchy-Green strain tensor. | |||
| |||
<math>W ={G_{1} \over 2 } (I_{1}-3)+{G_{2} \over 2 }(I_{2}-3)+{K\over 2 }(J-1)^2 </math> | |||
where <math>G_{1}</math>, <math>G_{2}</math> and K are material properties, <math>I_{1}</math>, <math>I_{2}</math> and J are the invariant of the chosen strain tensor, with J=det F and | |||
<math>I_{1} ={B_{xx}+B_{yy}+B_{zz} \over J^{2/3}} </math> | |||
<math>I_{2} ={1 \over 2} (I_{1}^2-{{B_{xx}^2+B_{yy}^2+B_{zz}^2+2B_{xy}^2+2B_{xz}^2+2B_{yz}^2} \over J^{2/3}}) </math> | |||
For low strains, this material is equivalent for a linear elastic, isotropic material with shear modulus G1 + G2 and bulk modulus K. If G2 = 0, the material is a neo-Hookean material. See below for an alternate compressibility terms. Some hyperelastic rubber models assume incompressible materials, which corresponds to K → ∞; such models do not work in dynamic code (because wave speed is infinite). | |||
 |
Revision as of 11:44, 15 September 2013
Constitutive Law
The Mooney-Rivlin material Mooney-Rivlin is an isotropic, elastic, hyperelastic material. The constitutive law derived from a strain energy function that is a function of the deformation gradient tensor F.
Regarding to the objectivity conditions and using the representation theorem,strain energy is represented by the invariants of a strain tensor, such as the left Cauchy-Green strain tensor.
[math]\displaystyle{ W ={G_{1} \over 2 } (I_{1}-3)+{G_{2} \over 2 }(I_{2}-3)+{K\over 2 }(J-1)^2 }[/math]
where [math]\displaystyle{ G_{1} }[/math], [math]\displaystyle{ G_{2} }[/math] and K are material properties, [math]\displaystyle{ I_{1} }[/math], [math]\displaystyle{ I_{2} }[/math] and J are the invariant of the chosen strain tensor, with J=det F and
[math]\displaystyle{ I_{1} ={B_{xx}+B_{yy}+B_{zz} \over J^{2/3}} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ I_{2} ={1 \over 2} (I_{1}^2-{{B_{xx}^2+B_{yy}^2+B_{zz}^2+2B_{xy}^2+2B_{xz}^2+2B_{yz}^2} \over J^{2/3}}) }[/math]
For low strains, this material is equivalent for a linear elastic, isotropic material with shear modulus G1 + G2 and bulk modulus K. If G2 = 0, the material is a neo-Hookean material. See below for an alternate compressibility terms. Some hyperelastic rubber models assume incompressible materials, which corresponds to K → ∞; such models do not work in dynamic code (because wave speed is infinite).