Predicting the pressure-volume curve of an elastic microsphere composite
Riccardo De Pascalis, I. David Abrahams, William J. Parnell

TL;DR
This paper develops a model to predict the pressure-volume response of a microsphere composite with nonlinear elastic matrix and gas-filled shells, accounting for buckling, large deformations, and microstructure effects.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model incorporating buckling, large deformation, and microstructure effects to predict pressure-volume curves of elastic microsphere composites.
Findings
Pressure-volume curves strongly depend on microsphere distribution and shell stiffness.
Modest dependence on the nonlinear elastic properties of the host matrix.
Derived asymptotic solution for spherical cavity in hyperelastic medium.
Abstract
The effective macroscopic response of nonlinear elastomeric inhomogeneous materials is of great interest in many applications including nonlinear composite materials and soft biological tissues. The interest of the present work is associated with a microsphere composite material, which is modelled as a matrix-inclusion composite. The matrix phase is a homogeneous isotropic nonlinear rubber-like material and the inclusion phase is more complex, consisting of a distribution of sizes of stiff thin spherical shells filled with gas. Experimentally, such materials have been shown to undergo complex deformation under cyclic loading. Here, we consider microspheres embedded in an unbounded host material and assume that a hydrostatic pressure is applied in the "far-field". Taking into account a variety of effects including buckling of the spherical shells, large deformation of the host phase and…
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