Poisson‘s Ratio Induced Radial Inertia Confinement During Dynamic Compression of Hyperelastic Foams

Hyperelastic foams have excellent impact energy absorption capability and can experience full recovery following impact loading. Consequently, hyperelastic foams are selected for different applications as shock isolators. Obtaining accurate intrinsic dynamic compressive properties of the hyperelasti...

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Main Authors: Sanborn Brett, Song Bo, Lu Wei-Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2018-01-01
Series:EPJ Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201818302007
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spelling doaj-ed3c242283574dc58a581bdc81d510bb2021-08-02T05:16:44ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2018-01-011830200710.1051/epjconf/201818302007epjconf_dymat2018_02007Poisson‘s Ratio Induced Radial Inertia Confinement During Dynamic Compression of Hyperelastic FoamsSanborn BrettSong BoLu Wei-YangHyperelastic foams have excellent impact energy absorption capability and can experience full recovery following impact loading. Consequently, hyperelastic foams are selected for different applications as shock isolators. Obtaining accurate intrinsic dynamic compressive properties of the hyperelastic foams has become a crucial step in shock isolation design and evaluation. Radial inertia is a key issue in dynamic characterization of soft materials. Radial inertia induced stress in the sample is generally caused by axial acceleration and large deformation applied to a soft specimen. In this study, Poisson’s ratio of a typical hyperelastic foam – silicone foam – was experimentally characterized under high strain rate loading and was observed to drastically change across the densification process. A transition in the Poisson’s ratio of the silicone foam specimen during dynamic compression generated radial inertia which consequently resulted in additional axial stress in the silicone foam sample. A new analytical method was developed to address the Poisson’s ratio-induced radial inertia effects for hyperelastic foams during high rate compression.https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201818302007
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sanborn Brett
Song Bo
Lu Wei-Yang
spellingShingle Sanborn Brett
Song Bo
Lu Wei-Yang
Poisson‘s Ratio Induced Radial Inertia Confinement During Dynamic Compression of Hyperelastic Foams
EPJ Web of Conferences
author_facet Sanborn Brett
Song Bo
Lu Wei-Yang
author_sort Sanborn Brett
title Poisson‘s Ratio Induced Radial Inertia Confinement During Dynamic Compression of Hyperelastic Foams
title_short Poisson‘s Ratio Induced Radial Inertia Confinement During Dynamic Compression of Hyperelastic Foams
title_full Poisson‘s Ratio Induced Radial Inertia Confinement During Dynamic Compression of Hyperelastic Foams
title_fullStr Poisson‘s Ratio Induced Radial Inertia Confinement During Dynamic Compression of Hyperelastic Foams
title_full_unstemmed Poisson‘s Ratio Induced Radial Inertia Confinement During Dynamic Compression of Hyperelastic Foams
title_sort poisson‘s ratio induced radial inertia confinement during dynamic compression of hyperelastic foams
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Web of Conferences
issn 2100-014X
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Hyperelastic foams have excellent impact energy absorption capability and can experience full recovery following impact loading. Consequently, hyperelastic foams are selected for different applications as shock isolators. Obtaining accurate intrinsic dynamic compressive properties of the hyperelastic foams has become a crucial step in shock isolation design and evaluation. Radial inertia is a key issue in dynamic characterization of soft materials. Radial inertia induced stress in the sample is generally caused by axial acceleration and large deformation applied to a soft specimen. In this study, Poisson’s ratio of a typical hyperelastic foam – silicone foam – was experimentally characterized under high strain rate loading and was observed to drastically change across the densification process. A transition in the Poisson’s ratio of the silicone foam specimen during dynamic compression generated radial inertia which consequently resulted in additional axial stress in the silicone foam sample. A new analytical method was developed to address the Poisson’s ratio-induced radial inertia effects for hyperelastic foams during high rate compression.
url https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201818302007
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