Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7170469 European Journal of Mechanics - A/Solids 2014 18 Pages PDF
Abstract
It is generally agreed upon that fluids may play a major role in the creep behavior of materials comprising heterogeneous microstructures and fluid-filled porosities at small length scales. In more detail, nanoconfined fluid-filled interfaces are typically considered to act as a lubricants, once electrically charged solid surfaces start to glide along fluid sheets, with the fluid being typically in a liquid crystal state, which refers to an “adsorbed”, “ice-like”, or “glassy” structure of fluid molecules. Here, we aim at translating this interface behavior into apparent creep laws at the continuum scale of materials consisting of one non-creeping solid matrix with embedded fluid-filled interfaces. To this end, we consider a linear relationship between (i) average interface dislocations and (ii) corresponding interface tractions, with an interface viscosity as the proportionality constant. Homogenization schemes for eigenstressed heterogeneous materials are used to upscale this interface behavior to the much larger observation scale of a matrix-inclusion composite comprising an isotropic and linear elastic solid matrix, as well as interacting parallel interfaces of circular shape, which are embedded in the aforementioned matrix. This results in exponentially decaying macroscopic viscoelastic phenomena, with both creep and relaxation times increasing with increasing interface size and viscosity, as well as with decreasing elastic stiffness of the solid matrix; while only the relaxation time decreases with increasing interface density. Accordingly, non-asymptotic creep of hydrated (quasi-) crystalline materials at higher load intensities may be readily explained through non-stationarity, i.e. spreading, of liquid crystal interfaces throughout solid elastic matrices.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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