Abstract |
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Confined compression tests performed by
the authors on open-cell polyurethane foams reveal the presence
of strain localization. After a brief description of the
experiments, a theoretical model is proposed. In the model, the
foam is represented as a chain of elastic springs with a
two-phase strain energy density, and the strain localization is
due to a progressive collapse of the springs. The collapse is a
sort of continuum instability, which can be attributed to phase
transition. An appropriate choice of the material constants leads
to a close reproduction of the experimental force-elongation
response curves.
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Keywords
foam polymers, strain localization, nonconvex strain energy, solid-solid phase change
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Authors
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