Modelling of Creep and Stress Relaxation Test of a Polypropylene Microfibre by Using Fraction-Exponential Kernel
Author(s) -
Andrea Sorzia
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
modelling and simulation in engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.264
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 1687-5591
pISSN - 1687-5605
DOI - 10.1155/2016/3823047
Subject(s) - polypropylene , viscoelasticity , materials science , creep , exponential function , composite material , stress relaxation , composite number , ultimate tensile strength , laplace transform , stress (linguistics) , relaxation (psychology) , breakage , mathematics , mathematical analysis , psychology , social psychology , linguistics , philosophy
A tensile test until breakage and a creep and relaxation test on a polypropylene fibre are carried out and the resulting creep and stress relaxation curves are fit by a model adopting a fraction-exponential kernel in the viscoelastic operator. The models using fraction-exponential functions are simpler than the complex ones obtained from combination of dashpots and springs and, furthermore, are suitable for fitting experimental data with good approximation allowing, at the same time, obtaining inverse Laplace transform in closed form. Therefore, the viscoelastic response of polypropylene fibres can be modelled straightforwardly through analytical methods. Addition of polypropylene fibres greatly improves the tensile strength of composite materials with concrete matrix. The proposed analytical model can be employed for simulating the mechanical behaviour of composite materials with embedded viscoelastic fibres
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