Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6748970 | International Journal of Solids and Structures | 2015 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The self-heating temperature of filled rubbers under cyclic loading at environmental conditions is well-known. This increase in temperature seriously affects the constitutive stress-strain behavior by producing a thermal softening of the rubber compound. Although this feature is well-recognized and considered as important to its function, few constitutive thermo-mechanical models attempt to quantify the stress-temperature relationship. In this work, a physically-based model is developed to describe the large strain relaxed response of filled rubbers over a wide range of temperatures. The non-linear mechanical behavior is described via a Langevin formalism in which the temperature and filler effects are, respectively, included by a network thermal kinetics and an amplification of the first strain invariant. Experimental observations on the relaxed state of styrene-butadiene rubber hourglass-shaped specimens with a given carbon-black content are reported at different temperatures. A hybrid experimental-numerical method is proposed to determine simultaneously the local thermo-mechanical response and the model parameters. In addition, the predictive capability of the proposed constitutive thermo-mechanical model is verified by comparisons with results issued from micromechanical simulations containing different arrangements of the microstructure. The results show that the model offers a satisfactory way to predict the relaxed response of filled rubbers at different temperatures.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Civil and Structural Engineering
Authors
C. Ovalle Rodas, F. Zaïri, M. Naït-Abdelaziz, P. Charrier,