Swelling and shrinking in prestressed polymer gels: An incremental stress-diffusion analysis

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Abstract

Polymer gels are porous fluid-saturated materials which can swell or shrink triggered by various stimuli. The swelling/shrinking-induced deformation can generate large stresses which may lead to the failure of the material. In the present research, a nonlinear stress-diffusion model is employed to investigate the stress and the deformation state arising in hydrated constrained polymer gels when subject to a varying chemical potential. Two different constraint configurations are taken into account: (i) elastic constraint along the thickness direction and (ii) plane elastic constraint. The first step entirely defines a compressed/tensed configuration. From there, an incremental chemo-mechanical analysis is presented. The derived model extends the classical linear poroelastic theory with respect to a prestressed configuration. Finally, the comparison between the analytical results obtained by the proposed model and a particular problem already discussed in literature for a stress-free gelmembrane (one-dimensional test case) will highlight the relevance of the derived model.

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Rossi, M., Nardinocchi, P., & Wallmersperger, T. (2019). Swelling and shrinking in prestressed polymer gels: An incremental stress-diffusion analysis. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 475(2230). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2019.0174

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