It is by now well established that loading conditions with sufficiently large triaxialities can induce the sudden appearance of internal cavities within elastomeric (and other soft) solids. The occurrence of such instabilities, commonly referred to as cavitation, can be attributed to the growth of pre-existing defects into finite sizes. This paper introduces a new theory to study the phenomenon of cavitation in soft solids that: (i) allows to consider general 3D loading conditions with arbitrary triaxiality, (ii) applies to large (including compressible and anisotropic) classes of nonlinear elastic solids, and (iii) incorporates direct information on the initial shape, spatial distribution, and mechanical properties of the underlying defect...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
A material is considered soft when its bulk modulus is significantly greater than its shear modulus....
In Part I of this work we derived a fairly general theory of cavitation in elastomeric solids based ...
It is by now well established that loading conditions with sufficiently large triaxialities can indu...
It is by now well established that loading conditions with sufficiently large triaxialities can indu...
It is by now well established that loading conditions with sufficiently large triaxialities can indu...
Abstract. Experiments on polymers indicate that large tensile stress can induce cavitation, that is,...
Cavitation in soft solid is a phenomenon that cavity in an elastomer can expand rapidly when inner p...
Cavitation in soft solid is a phenomenon that cavity in an elastomer can expand rapidly when inner p...
AbstractIn this paper, we attempted to construct a constitutive model to deal with the phenomenon of...
This paper discusses the growth of a pre-existing void in a nonlinear viscoelastic material subjecte...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
A material is considered soft when its bulk modulus is significantly greater than its shear modulus....
In Part I of this work we derived a fairly general theory of cavitation in elastomeric solids based ...
It is by now well established that loading conditions with sufficiently large triaxialities can indu...
It is by now well established that loading conditions with sufficiently large triaxialities can indu...
It is by now well established that loading conditions with sufficiently large triaxialities can indu...
Abstract. Experiments on polymers indicate that large tensile stress can induce cavitation, that is,...
Cavitation in soft solid is a phenomenon that cavity in an elastomer can expand rapidly when inner p...
Cavitation in soft solid is a phenomenon that cavity in an elastomer can expand rapidly when inner p...
AbstractIn this paper, we attempted to construct a constitutive model to deal with the phenomenon of...
This paper discusses the growth of a pre-existing void in a nonlinear viscoelastic material subjecte...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
We revisit the classic problem of elastic cavitation within the framework of stochastic elasticity. ...
A material is considered soft when its bulk modulus is significantly greater than its shear modulus....