| Literature DB >> 32028726 |
Subhashini Anandan1, Cuin Yang Lim1, Boon Thong Tan2, Vivi Anggraini1, Mavinakere Eshwaraiah Raghunandan1,3.
Abstract
This paper presents a pioneering effort to ascertain the suitability of hyperelastic modelling in simulating the stress-strain response of oil palm shell reinforced rubber (ROPS) composites. ROPS composites with different oil palm shell contents (0%, 5%, 10% and 20% by volume) were cast in the laboratory for the experimental investigation. ROPS specimens with circular, square, hexagon, and octagon shapes (loading surface) were considered to evaluate the accuracy of finite element simulation considering the shape effect of composites. Strain-controlled (compressive) tests with ε ≈ 50% at 0.8 Hz frequency were conducted in the laboratory and the test data obtained was used as input to simulate material coefficients corresponding to the strain energy functions chosen. Five different strain energy functions were selected and utilized for the hyperelastic modelling in this study using finite element approach. The shape effect was then used to ascertain any variation in the simulation outcomes and to discuss the effect of shape on the behaviour of ROPS composites in comparison to existing literature. The numerical predictions using the Yeoh model (error ≤ 2.7% for circular shaped ROPS) were found to perform best in comparison with the experimental results, thus a more stable and suitable hyperelastic model to this end. The Marlow (error ≤ 4.6% for circular shaped ROPS) and Arruda Boyce (error ≤ 4.7% for circular shaped ROPS) models were amongst the next alternatives to perform better. Even with the other shapes considered in this study, Yeoh, followed by the Marlow function, were more appropriate models. The shape effect was then studied with particular emphasis on comparing and assessing them with that observed in the literature. To this end, adopting the Yeoh function in the finite element model is the ideal approach to estimate the stress-strain response of ROPS composites.Entities:
Keywords: compressive loading; finite element; hyperelastic model; strain energy function
Year: 2020 PMID: 32028726 PMCID: PMC7077467 DOI: 10.3390/polym12020314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Images showing the moulds used for casting the ROPS specimens in laboratory: (a) circular; (b) square; (c) hexagon; (d) octagon.
Summary of the SEFs considered in this study [29].
| The Mooney Rivlin function is obtained by setting N = 1 in Equation (1). |
| The Neo Hookean function is a first order reduced polynomial form obtained by equating |
| The Yeoh function is a third order reduced polynomial function by Yeoh [ |
| The Arruda Boyce function [ |
| The Marlow form is expressed as |
Figure 2Typical response of circular shaped ROPS specimen to compressive loading: (a) variation of compressive stress with N; (b) effect of increasing OPS content on measured stress–strain response of ROPS samples in loading stage; (c) curve fitting of different SEFs with the experimental data.
Material coefficients of stable strain energy functions of circular ROPS specimens.
| OPS (%) | Mooney Rivlin | Neo Hookean | Yeoh | Arruda Boyce | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C10 | C01 | C10 | C10 | C20 | C30 | µ | λm | |
| 0 | −0.0255 | 0.0412 | 0.0419 | 0.0295 | −0.0042 | 0.0088 | 0.0498 | 2.2196 |
| 5 | 0.0270 | 0.0006 | 0.0807 | 0.0293 | −0.0030 | 1.3414 | 0.0548 | 3.0235 |
| 10 | 0.0293 | 0.0672 | 0.1281 | 0.0705 | 0.0406 | −0.0073 | 0.1226 | 1.0911 |
| 20 | 0.0513 | 0.1439 | 0.1516 | 0.0894 | 0.1350 | −0.0457 | 0.2397 | 1.1606 |
Figure 3Stress–strain response of circular ROPS composites: (a) 0% OPS; (b) 5% OPS; (c) 10% OPS; (d) 20% OPS content; (e) undeformed ROPS model; (f) deformed ROPS model; (g) top-view of undeformed model at ε ≈ 50%; (h) top-view of deformed model with stress contours at ε ≈ 50%.
Summary of σmax (in kN/m2) and error for circular ROPS specimens.
| OPS Content | SEF Type | σmax—Simulation | σmax—Experimental | Error (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0% | Yeoh | 581.35 | 604 | −2 |
| Marlow | 591.92 | −3.8 | ||
| Arruda Boyce | 585.88 | −3 | ||
| Mooney Rivlin | 579.84 | −4 | ||
| Neo Hooke | 525.48 | −13 | ||
| 5% | Yeoh | 828.72 | 862 | −2.2 |
| Marlow | 843.173 | −3.9 | ||
| Arruda Boyce | 837.174 | −2.9 | ||
| Mooney Rivlin | 824.41 | −4.4 | ||
| Neo Hooke | 745.199 | −13.6 | ||
| 10% | Yeoh | 867.82 | 909 | −2.5 |
| Marlow | 885.911 | −4.5 | ||
| Arruda Boyce | 874.0035 | −3.9 | ||
| Mooney Rivlin | 852.18 | −6.3 | ||
| Neo Hooke | 775.9224 | −14.6 | ||
| 20% | Yeoh | 1370.989 | 1438 | −2.7 |
| Marlow | 1399.6054 | −4.7 | ||
| Arruda Boyce | 1369.83 | −4.7 | ||
| Mooney Rivlin | 1538.66 | 7 | ||
| Neo Hooke | 1185.631 | −17.6 |
Figure 4FE simulation of specimen under tension: (a) stress-stretch response of ROPS specimen; (b) tensile stress contours of ROPS with 5% OPS; (c) tensile stress contour of dumbbell shaped rubber.
Figure 5Stress–strain response of square shaped ROPS specimens: (a) 0% OPS; (b) 5% OPS; (c) 10% OPS; (d) 20% OPS; (e) un-deformed model; (f) deformed model with stress contours at ε ≈ 50%.
Figure 6Stress–strain response of hexagon shaped ROPS specimens: (a) 0% OPS; (b) 5% OPS; (c) 10% OPS; (d) 20% OPS; (e) un-deformed model; (f) deformed model with stress contours at ε ≈ 50%.
Figure 7Cyclic stress strain response of Octagonal samples: (a) 0% OPS; (b) 5% OPS; (c) 10% OPS; (d) 20% OPS; (e) un-deformed model; (f) deformed model with stress contours at ε ≈ 50%.
Figure 8Variation of the shape factor values and vertical stiffness obtained for different shapes in this study: (a) 0% OPS; (b) 5% OPS; (c) 10% OPS; (d) 20% OPS.