Multiplicative, Non-Newtonian Viscoelasticity Models for Rubber Materials and Brain Tissues: Numerical Treatment and Comparative Studies

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • German Institute of Rubber Technology (DIK e.V.)
View graph of relations

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2889–2927
Number of pages39
JournalArchives of Computational Methods in Engineering
Volume30
Issue number5
Early online date4 Mar 2023
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2023

Abstract

In many aspects, elastomers and soft biological tissues exhibit similar mechanical properties such as a pronounced nonlinear stress–strain relation and a viscoelastic response to external loads. Consequently, many models use the same rheological framework and material functions to capture their behavior. The viscosity function is thereby often assumed to be constant and the corresponding free energy function follows that one of the long-term equilibrium response. This work questions this assumption and presents a detailed study on non-Newtonian viscosity functions for elastomers and brain tissues. The viscosity functions are paired with several commonly used free energy functions and fitted to two different types of elastomers and brain tissues in cyclic and relaxation experiments, respectively. Having identified suitable viscosity and free energy functions for the different materials, numerical aspects of viscoelasticity are addressed. From the multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient and ensuring a non-negative dissipation rate, four equivalent viscoelasticity formulations are derived that employ different internal variables. Using an implicit exponential map as time integration scheme, the numerical behavior of these four formulations are compared among each other and numerically robust candidates are identified. The fitting results demonstrate that non-Newtonian viscosity functions significantly enhance the fitting quality. It is shown that the choice of a viscosity function is even more important than the choice of a free energy function and the classical neo-Hooke approach is often a sufficient choice. Furthermore, the numerical investigations suggest the superiority of two of the four viscoelasticity formulations, especially when complex finite element simulations are to be conducted.

Cite this

Multiplicative, Non-Newtonian Viscoelasticity Models for Rubber Materials and Brain Tissues: Numerical Treatment and Comparative Studies. / Ricker, Alexander; Gierig, Meike; Wriggers, Peter.
In: Archives of Computational Methods in Engineering, Vol. 30, No. 5, 06.2023, p. 2889–2927.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Download
@article{91cdb0f1df0748c38344c12e3a8aa678,
title = "Multiplicative, Non-Newtonian Viscoelasticity Models for Rubber Materials and Brain Tissues: Numerical Treatment and Comparative Studies",
abstract = "In many aspects, elastomers and soft biological tissues exhibit similar mechanical properties such as a pronounced nonlinear stress–strain relation and a viscoelastic response to external loads. Consequently, many models use the same rheological framework and material functions to capture their behavior. The viscosity function is thereby often assumed to be constant and the corresponding free energy function follows that one of the long-term equilibrium response. This work questions this assumption and presents a detailed study on non-Newtonian viscosity functions for elastomers and brain tissues. The viscosity functions are paired with several commonly used free energy functions and fitted to two different types of elastomers and brain tissues in cyclic and relaxation experiments, respectively. Having identified suitable viscosity and free energy functions for the different materials, numerical aspects of viscoelasticity are addressed. From the multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient and ensuring a non-negative dissipation rate, four equivalent viscoelasticity formulations are derived that employ different internal variables. Using an implicit exponential map as time integration scheme, the numerical behavior of these four formulations are compared among each other and numerically robust candidates are identified. The fitting results demonstrate that non-Newtonian viscosity functions significantly enhance the fitting quality. It is shown that the choice of a viscosity function is even more important than the choice of a free energy function and the classical neo-Hooke approach is often a sufficient choice. Furthermore, the numerical investigations suggest the superiority of two of the four viscoelasticity formulations, especially when complex finite element simulations are to be conducted.",
author = "Alexander Ricker and Meike Gierig and Peter Wriggers",
note = "Funding Information: The authors thank Silvia Budday, Friedrich-Alexander-Universit{\"a}t Erlangen-N{\"u}rnberg, for kindly providing the experimental data of the brain tissues.",
year = "2023",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1007/s11831-023-09889-x",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "2889–2927",
journal = "Archives of Computational Methods in Engineering",
issn = "1134-3060",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "5",

}

Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Multiplicative, Non-Newtonian Viscoelasticity Models for Rubber Materials and Brain Tissues: Numerical Treatment and Comparative Studies

AU - Ricker, Alexander

AU - Gierig, Meike

AU - Wriggers, Peter

N1 - Funding Information: The authors thank Silvia Budday, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, for kindly providing the experimental data of the brain tissues.

PY - 2023/6

Y1 - 2023/6

N2 - In many aspects, elastomers and soft biological tissues exhibit similar mechanical properties such as a pronounced nonlinear stress–strain relation and a viscoelastic response to external loads. Consequently, many models use the same rheological framework and material functions to capture their behavior. The viscosity function is thereby often assumed to be constant and the corresponding free energy function follows that one of the long-term equilibrium response. This work questions this assumption and presents a detailed study on non-Newtonian viscosity functions for elastomers and brain tissues. The viscosity functions are paired with several commonly used free energy functions and fitted to two different types of elastomers and brain tissues in cyclic and relaxation experiments, respectively. Having identified suitable viscosity and free energy functions for the different materials, numerical aspects of viscoelasticity are addressed. From the multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient and ensuring a non-negative dissipation rate, four equivalent viscoelasticity formulations are derived that employ different internal variables. Using an implicit exponential map as time integration scheme, the numerical behavior of these four formulations are compared among each other and numerically robust candidates are identified. The fitting results demonstrate that non-Newtonian viscosity functions significantly enhance the fitting quality. It is shown that the choice of a viscosity function is even more important than the choice of a free energy function and the classical neo-Hooke approach is often a sufficient choice. Furthermore, the numerical investigations suggest the superiority of two of the four viscoelasticity formulations, especially when complex finite element simulations are to be conducted.

AB - In many aspects, elastomers and soft biological tissues exhibit similar mechanical properties such as a pronounced nonlinear stress–strain relation and a viscoelastic response to external loads. Consequently, many models use the same rheological framework and material functions to capture their behavior. The viscosity function is thereby often assumed to be constant and the corresponding free energy function follows that one of the long-term equilibrium response. This work questions this assumption and presents a detailed study on non-Newtonian viscosity functions for elastomers and brain tissues. The viscosity functions are paired with several commonly used free energy functions and fitted to two different types of elastomers and brain tissues in cyclic and relaxation experiments, respectively. Having identified suitable viscosity and free energy functions for the different materials, numerical aspects of viscoelasticity are addressed. From the multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient and ensuring a non-negative dissipation rate, four equivalent viscoelasticity formulations are derived that employ different internal variables. Using an implicit exponential map as time integration scheme, the numerical behavior of these four formulations are compared among each other and numerically robust candidates are identified. The fitting results demonstrate that non-Newtonian viscosity functions significantly enhance the fitting quality. It is shown that the choice of a viscosity function is even more important than the choice of a free energy function and the classical neo-Hooke approach is often a sufficient choice. Furthermore, the numerical investigations suggest the superiority of two of the four viscoelasticity formulations, especially when complex finite element simulations are to be conducted.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85149336393&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s11831-023-09889-x

DO - 10.1007/s11831-023-09889-x

M3 - Article

VL - 30

SP - 2889

EP - 2927

JO - Archives of Computational Methods in Engineering

JF - Archives of Computational Methods in Engineering

SN - 1134-3060

IS - 5

ER -

By the same author(s)