Criteria for extensional necking instability in complex fluids and soft solids. Part I: imposed Hencky strain rate protocol
David M. Hoyle, Suzanne M. Fielding

TL;DR
This paper establishes universal criteria for the onset of necking instability in complex fluids and soft solids under uniaxial stretching, based on rheological response signatures, applicable across various materials and models.
Contribution
It derives universal, rheology-based criteria for necking onset in complex fluids and soft solids, validated across multiple constitutive models and regimes.
Findings
Necking is an intrinsic flow instability in complex fluids and soft solids.
Two modes of necking instability are identified: gentle and violent.
The classical Considéré criterion fails in viscoelastic regimes.
Abstract
We study the necking dynamics of a filament of complex fluid or soft solid in uniaxial tensile stretching at constant imposed Hencky strain rate , by means of linear stability analysis and nonlinear (slender filament) simulations. We demonstrate necking to be an intrinsic flow instability that arises as an inevitable consequence of the constitutive behaviour of essentially any material (with a possible rare exception, which we outline). We derive criteria for the onset of necking that are reportable simply in terms of characteristic signatures in the shapes of the experimentally measured rheological response functions, and should therefore apply universally to all materials. As evidence of their generality, we numerically show them to hold in six popular constitutive models of polymers and soft glasses. Two distinct modes of necking instability are predicted. The first…
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