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  2. Rubber elasticity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_elasticity

    Measurements showing how the tensile stress in a stretched rubber sample varies with temperature are shown in Fig. 4. In these experiments, [22] the strain of a stretched rubber sample was held fixed as the temperature was varied between 10 and 70 degrees Celsius. For each value of fixed strain, it is seen that the tensile stress varied ...

  3. Stress–strain curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stressstrain_curve

    The stress and strain can be normal, shear, or a mixture, and can also be uniaxial, biaxial, or multiaxial, and can even change with time. The form of deformation can be compression, stretching, torsion, rotation, and so on. If not mentioned otherwise, stressstrain curve typically refers to the relationship between axial normal stress and ...

  4. Hyperelastic material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperelastic_material

    The most common example of this kind of material is rubber, whose stress-strain relationship can be defined as non-linearly elastic, isotropic and incompressible. Hyperelasticity provides a means of modeling the stressstrain behavior of such materials. [2] The behavior of unfilled, vulcanized elastomers often conforms closely to the ...

  5. Ogden hyperelastic model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogden_hyperelastic_model

    For rubber and biological materials, more sophisticated models are necessary. Such materials may exhibit a non-linear stressstrain behaviour at modest strains, or are elastic up to huge strains. These complex non-linear stressstrain behaviours need to be accommodated by specifically tailored strain-energy density functions.

  6. Young's modulus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young's_modulus

    Young's modulus is the slope of the linear part of the stressstrain curve for a material under tension or ... Rubber, small strain 0.01–0.1 0.00145–0.0145 [13 ...

  7. Mullins effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mullins_effect

    Stressstrain curves for a filled rubber showing progressive cyclic softening, also known as the Mullins effect. The Mullins effect is a particular aspect of the mechanical response in filled rubbers, in which the stressstrain curve depends on the maximum loading previously encountered. [1]

  8. Mooney–Rivlin solid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mooney–Rivlin_solid

    Elastic response of rubber-like materials are often modeled based on the Mooney–Rivlin model. The constants , are determined by fitting the predicted stress from the above equations to the experimental data. The recommended tests are uniaxial tension, equibiaxial compression, equibiaxial tension, uniaxial compression, and for shear, planar ...

  9. Yeoh hyperelastic model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeoh_hyperelastic_model

    Yeoh model prediction versus experimental data for natural rubber. Model parameters and experimental data from PolymerFEM.com. The Yeoh hyperelastic material model [1] is a phenomenological model for the deformation of nearly incompressible, nonlinear elastic materials such as rubber.