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Finite Element Procedures in Modelling the Dynamic Properties of Rubber

Olsson, Anders K LU (2007) In TVSM-1000 300(TVSM-1021).
Abstract
Rubber is not only a non-linear elastic material, it is also dependent on strain rate, temperature and strain amplitude. The non-linear elastic property and the strain amplitude dependence give a non-linear dynamic behavior that is covered by the models suggested in this thesis. The focus is on a finite element procedure for modelling these dynamic properties of rubber in a way that is easy to adopt by the engineering community.



The thesis consists of a summary and five appended papers.



The first paper presents a method to model the rate and amplitude dependent behavior of rubber components subjected to dynamic loading. Using a standard finite element code, it is shown how a model can be obtained... (More)
Rubber is not only a non-linear elastic material, it is also dependent on strain rate, temperature and strain amplitude. The non-linear elastic property and the strain amplitude dependence give a non-linear dynamic behavior that is covered by the models suggested in this thesis. The focus is on a finite element procedure for modelling these dynamic properties of rubber in a way that is easy to adopt by the engineering community.



The thesis consists of a summary and five appended papers.



The first paper presents a method to model the rate and amplitude dependent behavior of rubber components subjected to dynamic loading. Using a standard finite element code, it is shown how a model can be obtained through an overlay of viscoelastic and elastoplastic finite element models.



The model presented in the first paper contains a large number of material parameters that have to be identified. The second paper suggests a method to identify the material parameters of this model in a structured way. Experimental data for thirteen different materials were obtained from harmonic shear tests. Using a minimization approach it is shown how the viscoelastic-elastoplastic model can be fitted to the experimental data.



Using the methods presented in the first two papers, a radially loaded rubber bushing was modelled in the third paper. The material properties of the finite element model were based on dynamic shear tests. The dynamic response of the finite element model of the bushing was then compared to measurements of a real bushing. Thus, verifying the entire procedure from material test to finite element model.



Steady state loading is a very common load case for many rubber components. Although it is possible to analyze this load with the earlier discussed viscoplastic model, the regularity of this load lends it self to described in a more efficient way. For this load case a simplified viscoelastic method is adopted. The basic idea of this model is to create a new viscoelastic model for each amplitude. In paper IV this method is compared to the previous viscoplastic model as well as verifying measurements.



In paper V both the viscoelastoplastic model and the modified viscoelastic model are used to analyze rubber coated rollers. Different aspects of the two models are highlighted and the models are used to analyze how the non-linear dynamic characteristics of the rubber material influences the rolling contact.



Together the five papers present a set of tools for analyzing the dynamic behavior of rubber components, from material testing to finite element modelling. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Popular Abstract in Swedish

Gummi är inte enbart olinjärt elastiskt, det är också beroende av töjningshastighet och töjningsamplitud. Kombinationen av de olinjära elastiska egenskaperna och amplitudberoendet behandlas av de modeller som föreslås i avhandlingen. Modellerna är utformade så att de snabbt ska kunna implementeras i industrin.
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Dr Muhr, Alan, Tun Abdul Razak Research Centre, UK
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
akustik, vibration and acoustic engineering, Materiallära, materialteknik, Mechanical engineering, hydraulics, vacuum technology, Material technology, dynamic, amplitude, frequency, Technological sciences, Teknik, FEM, rubber, vibrationer, vakuumteknik, Maskinteknik, hydraulik
in
TVSM-1000
volume
300
issue
TVSM-1021
pages
132 pages
publisher
Structural Mechanics, Lund University
defense location
Room V:B, V-Building Lund University Faculty of Engineering John Ericssons väg 1 Lund Sweden
defense date
2007-04-13 10:15:00
external identifiers
  • other:ISRN:LUTVDG/TVSM--07/1021--SE(1-116)
ISSN
0281-6679
ISBN
978-91-628-7130-7
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
93e2f42a-ba79-4f6c-9e45-3abe4909b4d5 (old id 548298)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 15:58:01
date last changed
2023-10-16 09:26:47
@phdthesis{93e2f42a-ba79-4f6c-9e45-3abe4909b4d5,
  abstract     = {{Rubber is not only a non-linear elastic material, it is also dependent on strain rate, temperature and strain amplitude. The non-linear elastic property and the strain amplitude dependence give a non-linear dynamic behavior that is covered by the models suggested in this thesis. The focus is on a finite element procedure for modelling these dynamic properties of rubber in a way that is easy to adopt by the engineering community.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The thesis consists of a summary and five appended papers.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The first paper presents a method to model the rate and amplitude dependent behavior of rubber components subjected to dynamic loading. Using a standard finite element code, it is shown how a model can be obtained through an overlay of viscoelastic and elastoplastic finite element models.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The model presented in the first paper contains a large number of material parameters that have to be identified. The second paper suggests a method to identify the material parameters of this model in a structured way. Experimental data for thirteen different materials were obtained from harmonic shear tests. Using a minimization approach it is shown how the viscoelastic-elastoplastic model can be fitted to the experimental data.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
Using the methods presented in the first two papers, a radially loaded rubber bushing was modelled in the third paper. The material properties of the finite element model were based on dynamic shear tests. The dynamic response of the finite element model of the bushing was then compared to measurements of a real bushing. Thus, verifying the entire procedure from material test to finite element model.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
Steady state loading is a very common load case for many rubber components. Although it is possible to analyze this load with the earlier discussed viscoplastic model, the regularity of this load lends it self to described in a more efficient way. For this load case a simplified viscoelastic method is adopted. The basic idea of this model is to create a new viscoelastic model for each amplitude. In paper IV this method is compared to the previous viscoplastic model as well as verifying measurements.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
In paper V both the viscoelastoplastic model and the modified viscoelastic model are used to analyze rubber coated rollers. Different aspects of the two models are highlighted and the models are used to analyze how the non-linear dynamic characteristics of the rubber material influences the rolling contact.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
Together the five papers present a set of tools for analyzing the dynamic behavior of rubber components, from material testing to finite element modelling.}},
  author       = {{Olsson, Anders K}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-628-7130-7}},
  issn         = {{0281-6679}},
  keywords     = {{akustik; vibration and acoustic engineering; Materiallära; materialteknik; Mechanical engineering; hydraulics; vacuum technology; Material technology; dynamic; amplitude; frequency; Technological sciences; Teknik; FEM; rubber; vibrationer; vakuumteknik; Maskinteknik; hydraulik}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{TVSM-1021}},
  publisher    = {{Structural Mechanics, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  series       = {{TVSM-1000}},
  title        = {{Finite Element Procedures in Modelling the Dynamic Properties of Rubber}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/4528084/548299.pdf}},
  volume       = {{300}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}