Periodic necking of misfit hyperelastic filaments embedded in a soft matrix
Jian Li, Hannah Varner, Tal Cohen

TL;DR
This study investigates periodic necking in hyperelastic filaments embedded in a matrix, combining experiments, bifurcation analysis, and simulations to understand how material softening and misfit strains influence instability modes and fragmentation.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized hyperelastic model to analyze necking in embedded filaments, revealing three bifurcation modes and the effects of softening and misfit stretch, advancing understanding of material failure.
Findings
Experimental demonstration of matrix influence on necking
Identification of three bifurcation modes
Softening and misfit stretch affect stability and wavelength
Abstract
The necking instability is a precursor to tensile failure and rupture of materials. A quasistatically loaded free-standing uniaxial specimen typically exhibits necking at a single location, corresponding to a long wavelength bifurcation mode. If confined to a substrate or embedded in a matrix, the same filament can exhibit periodic necking thus creating segments of finite length. While periodic instabilities have been extensively studied in ductile metal filaments and thin sheets, less is known about necking in hyperelastic materials. There is a renewed interest in the role of necking in novel materials to advance fabrication processes and to explain fragmentation phenomena observed in 3D printed active biological matter. In both cases materials are not well described by existing frameworks that employ J2 plasticity, and existing studies ignore the role of misfit stretches that may…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Advanced Materials and Mechanics · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
