At least three invariants are necessary to model the mechanical response of incompressible, transversely isotropic materials
Michel Destrade, Brian Mac Donald, Jerry Murphy, Giuseppe Saccomandi

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new testing protocol for transversely isotropic materials, demonstrating that at least three invariants are needed to accurately model their nonlinear elastic response, especially in biological tissues.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified homogenous deformation test for off-axis tension and shows that three invariants are essential for accurate modeling of such materials.
Findings
Homogeneous deformation assumption is valid for moderate strains.
Universal relation based on two invariants is insufficient.
At least three invariants are necessary for accurate material modeling.
Abstract
The modelling of off-axis simple tension experiments on transversely isotropic nonlinearly elastic materials is considered. A testing protocol is proposed where normal force is applied to one edge of a rectangular specimen with the opposite edge allowed to move laterally but constrained so that no vertical displacement is allowed. Numerical simulations suggest that this deformation is likely to remain substantially homogeneous throughout the specimen for moderate deformations. It is therefore further proposed that such tests can be modelled adequately as a homogenous deformation consisting of a triaxial stretch accompanied by a simple shear. Thus the proposed test should be a viable alternative to the standard biaxial tests currently used as material characterisation tests for transversely isotropic materials in general and, in particular, for soft, biological tissue. A consequence of…
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