scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

A principle of virtual work for combined electrostatic and mechanical loading of materials

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, an internal material virtual work was derived for a system in which the material deformation and electrostatic polarizations are arbitrary. Butler et al. formulated a mechanical/electrostatic energy balance in terms of the electric enthalpy, in which electric potential and the electric field are the independent variables, and charge and electric displacement are the conjugate thermodynamic forces.
Abstract
The equations governing mechanics and electrostatics are formulated for a system in which the material deformations and electrostatic polarizations are arbitrary. A mechanical/electrostatic energy balance is formulated for this situation in terms of the electric enthalpy, in which the electric potential and the electric field are the independent variables, and charge and electric displacement, respectively, are the conjugate thermodynamic forces. This energy statement is presented in the form of a principle of virtual work (PVW), in which external virtual work is equated to internal virtual work. The resulting expression involves an internal material virtual work in which (1) material polarization is work-conjugate to increments of electric field, and (2) a combination of Cauchy stress, Maxwell stress and a product of polarization and electric field is work-conjugate to increments of strain. This PVW is valid for all material types, including those that are conservative and those that are dissipative. Such a virtual work expression is the basis for a rigorous formulation of a finite element method for problems involving the deformation and electrostatic charging of materials, including electroactive polymers and switchable ferroelectrics. The internal virtual work expression is used to develop the structure of conservative constitutive laws governing, for example, electroactive elastomers and piezoelectric materials, thereby determining the form of the Maxwell or electrostatic stress. It is shown that the Maxwell or electrostatic stress has a form fully constrained by the constitutive law and cannot be chosen independently of it. The structure of constitutive laws for dissipative materials, such as viscoelastic electroactive polymers and switchable ferroelectrics, is similarly determined, and it is shown that the Maxwell or electrostatic stress for these materials is identical to that for a material having the same conservative response when the dissipative processes in the material are shut off. The form of the internal virtual work is used further to develop the structure of dissipative constitutive laws controlled by rearrangement of material internal variables.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Theory of dielectric elastomers

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a theory of dielectric elastomers, developed within continuum mechanics and thermodynamics, and motivated by molecular pictures and empirical observations, which couples large deformation and electric potential, and describes nonlinear and nonequilibrium behavior, such as electromechanical instability and viscoelasticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Harnessing large deformation and instabilities of soft dielectrics: Theory, experiment, and application

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors classify the deformation and instabilities of soft dielectrics into three generic modes: thinning and pull-in, electro-creasing to cratering, and electro-cavitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlinear electroelastostatics: Incremental equations and stability

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of the recently formulated nonlinear constitutive framework for the quasi-static response of electroelastic solids and its isotropic specialization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlinear electroelastostatics: a variational framework

TL;DR: In this paper, different formulations of the constitutive laws and governing equations for nonlinear electroelastic solids are reviewed and two new variational principles for electroelastostatics are introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling of dielectric elastomers: Design of actuators and energy harvesting devices

TL;DR: In this article, the governing equations for the electromechanically coupled behavior of dielectric elastomers in a thermodynamic framework are presented and the attendant finite-element formulation and implementation are discussed.
References
More filters
Book

Electrodynamics of continuous media

TL;DR: In this article, the propagation of electromagnetic waves and X-ray diffraction of X rays in crystals are discussed. But they do not consider the effects of superconductivity on superconducting conductors.
Book

Introduction to the mechanics of a continuous medium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a linearized theory of elasticity for tensors, which they call Linearized Theory of Elasticity (LTHE), which is based on tensors and elasticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-Speed Electrically Actuated Elastomers with Strain Greater Than 100%

TL;DR: It is shown that prestraining the film further improves the performance of electrical actuators made from films of dielectric elastomers coated on both sides with compliant electrode material.
Related Papers (5)