- Kelvin-Voigt material
A Kelvin-Voigt material, also called a Voigt material, is a
viscoelastic material having the properties both of elasticity andviscosity . It is named after the British physicist and engineerWilliam Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin and after German physicistWoldemar Voigt Definition
The Kelvin-Voigt model, also called the Voigt model, can be represented by a purely viscous damper and purely elastic spring connected in parallel as shown in the picture:
If we connect these two elements in series we get a model of a
Maxwell material .Since the two components of the model are arranged in parallel, the strains in each component are identical:
:epsilon_{Total={epsilon_{D={epsilon_{S
Similarly, the total stress will be the sum of the stress in each component:
:sigma_{Total={sigma_{D+{sigma_{S
From these equations we get that in a Kelvin-Voigt material, stress σ, strain ε and their rates of change with respect to time "t" are governed by equations of the form:
:sigma (t) = E epsilon(t) + eta frac {depsilon(t)} {dt}
where "E" is a modulus of elasticity and eta is the
viscosity . The equation can be applied either to theshear stress ornormal stress of a material.Effect of a sudden stress
If we suddenly apply some constant stress sigma_0 to
Kelvin-Voigt material , then the deformations would approach the deformation for the pure elastic material sigma_0/E with the difference decaying exponentially::varepsilon(t)=frac {sigma_0}{E} (1-e^{-lambda t}) ,
where "t" is time and the rate of relaxation lambda=frac {E}{eta}
lambda is also the inverse of the relaxation time.
The picture shows dependence of dimensionless deformation frac {Eepsilon(t)} {sigma_0} upon dimensionless time lambda t. The material is loaded by the stress at time t=0 that is released at different dimensionless times t_1^*=lambda t_1
right|frame|Dependence of dimensionless deformationupon dimensionless time under constant stress|Dependence of dimensionless deformationupon dimensionless time under constant stressIf we would free the material at time t_1, then the elastic element would retard the material back until the deformation become zero. The retardation obeys the following equation:
:varepsilon(t>t_1)=varepsilon(t_1)e^{-lambda t} .
Since all the deformation is reversible (though not suddenly) the
Kelvin-Voigt material is asolid .The Voigt model predicts creep more realistically than the Maxwell model, since for
:lim_{t oinfty}varepsilon = frac{sigma_0}{E}
while a Maxwell model predicts a linear relationship between strain and time, which is most often not the case. Alternatively, although the Kelvin-Voigt model is effective for predicting creep, it is not good at describing the relaxation behavior after the stress load is removed.
Dynamic modulus
The complex
dynamic modulus of theKelvin-Voigt material would be::E^star ( omega ) = E + i eta omega
Thus, the real and imaginary components of the dynamic modulus are:
:E_1 = Re [E( omega )] = E :E_2 = Im [E( omega )] = eta omega
Note that E_1 is constant, while E_2 is directly proportional to frequency (where the apparent viscosity, eta, is the constant of proportionality).
References
* Meyers and Chawla (1999): Section 13.10 of Mechanical Behaviors of Materials, "Mechanical behavior of Materials", 570-580. Prentice Hall, Inc.
* http://stellar.mit.edu/S/course/3/fa06/3.032/index.htmlSee also
*
Maxwell material
*Standard Linear Solid Material
*Generalized Maxwell material
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