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Toughness of natural rubber compounds under biaxial loading

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TLDR
In this paper, the effect of strain induced molecular orientation on the fracture toughness of natural rubber based compounds was studied under biaxial loading conditions, using non-linear elastic fracture mechanics.
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This article is published in Engineering Fracture Mechanics.The article was published on 2015-11-01 and is currently open access. It has received 10 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Fracture mechanics & Crack growth resistance curve.

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Sideways and stable crack propagation in a silicone elastomer

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that cracks propagate in a direction perpendicular to the initial precut and in the direction of the applied load, and they call this phenomenon "sideswitching" and stable cracking.
Journal Article

‘Sideways’ and stable crack propagation in a silicone elastomer

TL;DR: A form of fracture in soft elastomers that is called “sideways cracking” in which cracks propagate perpendicular to their “standard” trajectory, thereby allowing the material ahead of the crack to continue to sustain large loads and enabling enormous stretchabilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strain-Induced Crystallization in Natural Rubber: Flory’s Theory Revisited

TL;DR: Some aspects of the physical mechanisms involved in strain-induced crystallization in cross-linked natural rubber networks are discussed in this paper, and the theory of SIC as developed by Florian et al.
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Fracture toughness, hysteresis and stretchability of dielectric elastomers under equibiaxial and biaxial loading

TL;DR: In this paper, two potential dielectric elastomers, acrylic-based VHB and silicone-based Ecoflex, are tested and characterized under common loading conditions called equibiaxial and biaxial loading.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the experimental measurement of fracture toughness in SENT rubber specimens

TL;DR: In this paper, a direct comparison of several experimental approaches used in the literature to measure fracture toughness of rubber of rubber using single edge notched in tension (SENT) specimens, with the final aim to provide guidelines for an optimal testing procedure.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Confirming the continuum theory of dynamic brittle fracture for fast cracks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report measurements of dynamic fracture in a brittle, amorphous material that are in quantitative agreement with the theoretical single-crack equation of motion, from the initial stages of propagation up to vc.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crack blunting and the strength of soft elastic solids

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that when a material is so soft that the cohesive strength (or adhesive strength, in the case of interfacial fracture) exceeds the elastic modulus of the material, a crack will blunt instead of propagating.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of Methods to Characterize Rubber Elastic Behavior for Use in Finite Element Analysis

TL;DR: A review of methods used to characterize the elastic behavior of rubber for use in finite element analysis (FEA) is given in this paper, along with the tests required to characterize rubber according to these functions.
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Effect of materials variables on the tear behaviour of a non-crystallising elastomer

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured crack growth rates in pure shear test specimens as a function of strain energy release rate (G) for a non-crystallising SBR elastomer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Micromechanics of fracture in elastomers

TL;DR: In this article, a study of torn surfaces and the tips of propagating tears in elastomers has been carried out using scanning electron microscopy, and it was found that the intersection of secondary cracks at the tear tip, displaced somewhat from the general tear plane, and nucleated by inherent stress-raisers are characteristic features of the torn surfaces.
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Frequently Asked Questions (11)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Toughness of natural rubber compounds under biaxial loading" ?

Strain induced molecular orientation effect on the fracture toughness of natural rubber based compounds was studied under biaxial loading conditions, using non-linear elastic fracture mechanics. This is the post-print author version of the work. Publisher 's version of the paper is available at http: //dx. doi. org/10. 2015. 08. 003 This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives License 3. 

In this work previous results relevant to fracture tests under biaxial loading conditions were analysed anew in the framework of non-linear elastic fracture mechanics, and paired with some new results on a different test set-up, to study how the strain induced strength anisotropy influences toughness. 

It is well known that crystallising rubbers develop a strong strength anisotropy upon stretching: broadly speaking, if stretched along some direction they can become easier to break upon subsequent stretching perpendicularly to this direction [1–3]. 

Gent and Kim [2] tested notched rubber strips that were stretched, before testing, in a direction perpendicular to the testing one; their grip system allowed them to keep the pre-stretching level fixed during testing. 

Nevertheless it is to be noted these cuts acts as stress raiser, reducing the range of strains for which the biaxial material behaviour can be measured, as they cause premature failure at the edges. 

Although in brittle materials branches tend to partially follow the main crack path (they grow “forward”) it was here assumed that a power law could be used as a very rough approximation to describe their shape in order to introduce them into a finite element model. 

When there are no sideways cracks, the strain energy density is singular and approaches the tip following a 1/x power law, as indicated by the corresponding dashed line. 

The very same phenomenon that has been conjectured to be source of sideways crack propagation [4], i.e. the development of weak planes due to the orientation and crystallisation of rubber molecules, may as well be cause of the strong toughness decrease with applied pre-stretch. 

In this sense the development of the sideways cracks completely shields the crack tip, strongly reducing the stress intensity near the original crack tip and providing a huge improvement in the apparent material resistance to crack propagation. 

The vanishing of the J-integral was also verified by the compliance method [30], i.e. by extending the main crack tip along the x direction at fixed boundary displacement and studying the variation of the total strain energy U as a function of the crack length a. 

For both the tests the simulations were run for a time corresponding to the fracture time, defined as the initiation of propagation of the main in crack in the direction parallel to the initial notch, as determined from the video-recordings.