Extension and torsion of rubber-like hollow and solid circular cylinders for incompressible isotropic hyperelastic materials with limiting chain extensibility
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2063391
DOI10.1016/j.euromechsol.2021.104443OpenAlexW3207031459MaRDI QIDQ2063391
Afshin Anssari-Benam, Cornelius O. Horgan
Publication date: 11 January 2022
Published in: European Journal of Mechanics. A. Solids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euromechsol.2021.104443
scaling lawconstitutive modellinglimiting chain extensibilityextension and torsionPoynting-type effectstubes and solid cylinders
Related Items
A three-parameter structurally motivated robust constitutive model for isotropic incompressible unfilled and filled rubber-like materials, Large isotropic elastic deformations: on a \textit{comprehensive} model to correlate the theory and experiments for incompressible rubber-like materials, On modelling simple shear for isotropic incompressible rubber-like materials, Finite torsion of compressible circular cylinders: an approximate solution
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A three-dimensional constitutive model for the large stretch behavior of rubber elastic materials
- Torsional instability of stretched rubber cylinders
- Some results for generalized neo-Hookean elastic materials
- On extension and torsion of strain-stiffening rubber-like elastic circular cylinders
- A molecular-statistical basis for the Gent constitutive model of rubber elasticity
- Simple torsion of isotropic, hyperelastic, incompressible materials with limiting chain extensibility
- Large elastic deformations of isotropic materials. III. Some simple problems in cyclindrical polar co-ordinates
- Large elastic deformations of isotropic materials VI. Further results in the theory of torsion, shear and flexure
- Large elastic deformations of isotropic materials VII. Experiments on the deformation of rubber
- On a new class of non-Gaussian molecular-based constitutive models with limiting chain extensibility for incompressible rubber-like materials
- A new constitutive framework for arterial wall mechanics and a comparative study of material models