A non-affine micro-macro approach to strain-crystallizing rubber-like materials
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2199424
DOI10.1016/j.jmps.2017.10.007zbMath1441.74046OpenAlexW2761796420MaRDI QIDQ2199424
Publication date: 11 September 2020
Published in: Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmps.2017.10.007
strain-induced crystallizationhomogenizationmicromechanicsrubber-like materialsmaximal advance path constraint
Related Items (2)
A multiscale phase field fracture approach based on the non-affine microsphere model for rubber-like materials ⋮ A fully-relaxed variationally-consistent framework for inelastic micro-sphere models: finite viscoelasticity
Cites Work
- A micromechanically motivated diffusion-based transient network model and its incorporation into finite rubber viscoelasticity
- Three-dimensional finite elements with embedded strong discontinuities to model failure in electromechanical coupled materials
- A strong discontinuity approach on multiple levels to model solids at failure
- A three-dimensional constitutive model for the large stretch behavior of rubber elastic materials
- On improved network models for rubber elasticity and their applications to orientation hardening in glassy polymers
- A variational framework to model diffusion induced large plastic deformation and phase field fracture during initial two-phase lithiation of silicon electrodes
- A micro-macro approach to rubber-like materials. III: The micro-sphere model of anisotropic Mullins-type damage
- A micro-macro approach to rubber-like materials. I: The non-affine micro-sphere model of rubber elasticity
- A marching cubes based failure surface propagation concept for three-dimensional finite elements with non-planar embedded strong discontinuities of higher-order kinematics
- Thermodynamically consistent phase-field models of fracture: Variational principles and multi-field FE implementations
- Efficient Numerical Integration on the Surface of a Sphere
- The mechanics of rubber elasticity
- Aspects of the formulation and finite element implementation of large strain isotropic elasticity
This page was built for publication: A non-affine micro-macro approach to strain-crystallizing rubber-like materials