Abstract

The small amplitude dynamic response of materials can be tuned by employing inhomogeneous materials capable of large deformation. However, soft materials generally exhibit viscoelastic behaviour, i.e. loss and frequency-dependent effective properties. This is the case for inhomogeneous materials even in the homogenization limit when propagating wavelengths are much longer than phase lengthscales, since soft materials can possess long relaxation times. These media, possessing rich frequency-dependent behaviour over a wide range of low frequencies, can be termed metamaterials in modern terminology. The sub-class that are periodic are frequently termed soft phononic crystals although their strong dynamic behaviour usually depends on wavelengths being of the same order as the microstructure. In this paper we describe how the effective loss and storage moduli associated with longitudinal waves in thin inhomogeneous rods are tuned by pre-stress. Phases are assumed to be quasi-linearly viscoelastic, thus exhibiting time-deformation separability in their constitutive response. We illustrate however that the effective incremental response of the inhomogeneous medium does not exhibit time-deformation separability. For a range of nonlinear materials it is shown that there is strong coupling between the frequency of the small amplitude longitudinal wave and initial large deformation.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Rivlin's legacy in continuum mechanics and applied mathematics’.

Highlights

  • Visco-elastomeric materials are employed in numerous applications, e.g. noise and vibration isolators in machinery and the automotive and aerospace industry, bridge bearings and seismic shock absorbers in civil engineering applications as well as soft robotics, artificial muscles and more general soft tissue modelling [1,2,3]

  • The paper proceeds as follows: in §2, we describe the formulation of linear viscoelasticity in the time and subsequently in the frequency domain

  • We will describe the influence of large, quasi-static pre-stress on viscoelastic wave propagation, while we shall describe the situation when there is no pre-stress; this illustrates numerous aspects of viscoelastic wave propagation in heterogeneous media and sets the scene before we extend the study to incorporate the influence of pre-stress

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Summary

Introduction

Visco-elastomeric materials are employed in numerous applications, e.g. noise and vibration isolators in machinery and the automotive and aerospace industry, bridge bearings and seismic shock absorbers in civil engineering applications as well as soft robotics, artificial muscles and more general soft tissue modelling [1,2,3]. The paper proceeds as follows: in §2, we describe the formulation of linear viscoelasticity in the time and subsequently in the frequency domain This is the case for soft materials, which tend to have long relaxation times. It is shown that the effective (homogenized) incremental response does not behave in this separable manner with strong coupling between frequency and stretch

Linear viscoelasticity
Linear viscoelastic wave propagation through inhomogeneous rods
Quasi-static deformation of a quasi-linear viscoelastic medium
16 NH1-MR2
45 Y1-NH2 40 35 30 25 20
Conclusion
Methods

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