Abstract
Besides the typical hyperelastic behaviour, large elastic deformations with non-linear stress–strain behaviour, rubber-like materials may also exhibit some inelastic effects, like hysteresis and permanent set. One of them is a particular damage phenomenon called Mullins effect. This is visible when cyclic tension tests are performed with increasing values of deformation. Material is deformed up to a fixed strain value and then unloaded. When a second load is applied it is possible to observe a stress softening effect. In the present work uniaxial and equibiaxial tension tests have been carried out by a standard tensile machine and by an hydraulic bulge test experimental rig, respectively. In both tests optical methods have been used for strain measurement. Experimental data have been successively introduced in a numerical procedure that permitted to extract the best material parameters for two of the most known pseudo-elastic models [Ogden, R.W., Roxburgh, D.G., 1999. A pseudo-elastic model for the Mullins effect in filled rubber. Proceedings of the Royal Society London A 455, 2861–2877; Dorfmann, A., Ogden, R.W., 2004. A constitutive model for the Mullins effect with permanent set in particle-reinforced rubber. International Journal of Solids and Structures 41, 1855–1878] accounting for both stress-softening behaviour and residual strain.
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