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The success of a biaxial tensile test is strictly related to the shape of the specimen.
The success of a biaxial tensile test is strictly related to the shape of the specimen.
<ref name=":2">{{cite journal |last1=Makris |first1=A. |last2=Vandenbergh |first2=T. |last3=Ramault |first3=C. |last4=Van Hemelrijck |first4=D. |last5=Lamkanfi |first5=E. |last6=Van Paepegem |first6=W. |title=Shape optimisation of a biaxially loaded cruciform specimen |journal=Polymer Testing |date=April 2010 |volume=29 |issue=2 |pages=216–223 |doi=10.1016/j.polymertesting.2009.11.004}}</ref>
<ref name=":2">{{cite journal |last1=Makris |first1=A. |last2=Vandenbergh |first2=T. |last3=Ramault |first3=C. |last4=Van Hemelrijck |first4=D. |last5=Lamkanfi |first5=E. |last6=Van Paepegem |first6=W. |title=Shape optimisation of a biaxially loaded cruciform specimen |journal=Polymer Testing |date=April 2010 |volume=29 |issue=2 |pages=216–223 |doi=10.1016/j.polymertesting.2009.11.004}}</ref>
The two most used geometries are the squared and [[cruciform]] shapes. Dealing with fibrous materials or [[Fiber-reinforced_composite|fibres reinforced composites]], the fibres should be aligned to the load directions for both classes of specimens, in order to minimize the shear stresses and to avoid the sample rotation.<ref name=":3" />
The two most used geometries are the square and [[cruciform]] shapes. Dealing with fibrous materials or [[Fiber-reinforced_composite|fibres reinforced composites]], the fibres should be aligned to the load directions for both classes of specimens, in order to minimize the shear stresses and to avoid the sample rotation.<ref name=":3" />


[[File:Cruciform.png|thumb|upright=1.8|Two different designs of cruciform specimens for biaxial tensile tests. These two shapes differ for the fillet radii, the length of the arms and the internal area subjected to a biaxial tensile state.]]
[[File:Cruciform.png|thumb|upright=1.8|Two different designs of cruciform specimens for biaxial tensile tests. These two shapes differ for the fillet radii, the length of the arms and the internal area subjected to a biaxial tensile state. As only the central area of the specimen is subjected to a biaxial tensile state, the analysis is restricted to only a small part of the whole specimen.]]


=== Square samples===
=== Square samples===

Revision as of 07:16, 18 June 2021

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Biaxial tensile testing is a versatile technique to address the mechanical characterization of planar materials. Typical materials tested in biaxial configuration include metal sheets,[1] silicone elastomers,[2] composites,[3] thin films,[4] textiles [5] and biological soft tissues.[6]

An example of a biaxial tensile machine.

Purposes of biaxial tensile testing

A biaxial tensile test generally allows the assessment of the mechanical properties [7] and a complete characterization for uncompressible isotropic materials, which can be obtained through a fewer amount of specimens with respect to uniaxial tensile tests. [8] Biaxial tensile testing is particularly suitable for understanding the mechanical properties of biomaterials, due to their directionally oriented microstructures.[6] If the testing aims at the material characterization of the post elastic behaviour, the uniaxial results become inadequate, and a biaxial test is required in order to examine the plastic behaviour. [5] In addition to this, using uniaxial test results to predict rupture under biaxial stress states seems to be inadequate. [9] [10]

Even if a biaxial tensile test is performed in a planar configuration, it may be equivalent to the stress state applied on three-dimensional geometries, such as cylinders with an inner pressure and an axial stretching. [11] The relationship between the inner pressure and the circumferential stress is given by the Mariotte formula:

where is the circumferential stress, P the inner pressure, D the inner diameter and t the wall thickness of the tube.

Equipment

Typically, a biaxial tensile machine is equipped with motor stages, two load cells and a gripping system.

Motor stages

Through the movement of the motor stages a certain displacement is applied on the material sample. If the motor stage is one, the displacement is the same in the two direction and only the equi-biaxial state is allowed. On the other hand, by using four independent motor stages, any load condition is allowed; this feature makes the biaxial tensile test superior to other tests that may apply a biaxial tensile state, such as the hydaulic bulge, semispherical bulge, stack compression or flat punch. [12] Using four independent motor stages allows to keep the sample centred during the whole duration of the test; this feature is particularly useful to couple an image analysis during the mechanical test. The most common way to obtain the fields of displacements and strains is the Digital Image Correlation (DIC),[12] which is a contactless technique and so very useful since it doesn't affect the mechanical results. [13]

Load cells

Two load cells are placed along the two orthogonal load directions to measure the normal reaction forces explicated by the specimen. The dimensions of the sample have to be in accordance with the resolution and the full scale of the load cells.

A biaxial tensile test can be performed either in a load-controlled condition, or a displacement-controlled condition, in accordance with the settings of the biaxial tensile machine. In the former configuration a constant loading rate is applied and the displacements are measured, whereas in the latter configuration a constant displacement rate is applied and the forces are measured.

Dealing with elastic materials the load history is not relevant, whereas in viscoelastic materials it is not negligible. Furthermore, for this class of materials also the loading rate plays a role. [14]

Gripping system

The gripping system transfers the load from the motor stages to the specimen. Although the use of biaxial tensile testing is growing more and more, there is still a lack of robust standardized protocols concerning the gripping system. Since it plays a fundamental role in the application and distribution of the load, the gripping system has to be carefully designed in order to satisfy the Saint-Venant principle. [15] Some different gripping systems are reported below:

Clamps

The clamps are the most common used gripping system for biaxial tensile test since they allow a quite uniformly distributed load at the junction with the sample. [15] To increase the uniformity of stress in the region of the sample close to the clamps, some notches with circular tips are obtained from the arm of the sample. [16] The main problem related with the clamps is the low friction at the interface with the sample; indeed, if the friction between the inner surface of the clamps and the sample is too low, there could be a relative motion between the two systems altering the results of the test.

Sutures

Small holes are performed on the surface on the sample to connect it to the motor stages through wire with a stiffness much higher than the sample. Typically, sutures are used with square samples. In contrast to the clamps, sutures allow the rotation of the sample around the axis perpendicular to the plane; in this way they do not allow the transmission of shear stresses to the sample. [15] The load transmission is very local, thereby the load distribution is not uniform. A template is needed to apply the sutures in the same position in different samples, to have repeatability among different tests.

Rakes

This system is similar to the suture gripping system, but stiffer. The rakes transfer a limited quantity of shear stress, so they are less useful than sutures if used in presence of large shear strains. Although the load is transmitted in a discontinuous way, the load distribution is more uniform if compared to the sutures. [15]

Specimen shape

The success of a biaxial tensile test is strictly related to the shape of the specimen. [17] The two most used geometries are the square and cruciform shapes. Dealing with fibrous materials or fibres reinforced composites, the fibres should be aligned to the load directions for both classes of specimens, in order to minimize the shear stresses and to avoid the sample rotation.[15]

Two different designs of cruciform specimens for biaxial tensile tests. These two shapes differ for the fillet radii, the length of the arms and the internal area subjected to a biaxial tensile state. As only the central area of the specimen is subjected to a biaxial tensile state, the analysis is restricted to only a small part of the whole specimen.

Square samples

Square or more generally rectangular specimens are easy to obtain, and their dimension and ratio depend on the material availability. Large specimens are needed to make negligible the effects of the gripping system in the core of the sample. However this solution is very material consuming so small specimen are required. Since the gripping system is very close to the core of the specimen the strain distribution is not homogeneous. [18] [19]

Cruciform samples

A proper cruciform sample should fulfil the following requirements: [20] [21]

  • maximisation of the biaxially loaded area in the centre of the sample, where the strain field is uniform;
  • minimization of the shear strain in the centre of the sample;
  • minimization of regions of stress concentration, even outside the area of interest;
  • failure in the biaxially loaded area;
  • repeatable results.

Is important to note that on this kind of sample, the stretch is larger in the outer region than in the centre, where the strain is uniform.[16]

Analytical solution

A biaxial tensile state can be derived starting from the most general constitutive law for isotropic materials in large strains regime:

where S is the second Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor, I the identity matrix, C the right Cauchy-Green tensor, and , and the derivatives of the strain energy function per unit of volume in the undeformed configuration with respect to the three invariants of C.

For an uncompressible material, the previous equation becomes:

where p is of hydrostatic nature and plays the role of a Lagrange multiplier. It is worth nothing that p is not the hydrostatic pressure and must be determined independently of constitutive model of the material.

A well-posed problem requires specifying ; for a biaxial state of a membrane , thereby the p term can be obtained

where is the third component of the diagonal of C.

According to the definition, the three non zero components of the deformation gradient tensor F are , and .

Consequently, the components of C can be calculated with the formula , and they are , and .

According with this stress state, the two non zero components of the second Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor are:

By using the relationship between the second Piola-Kirchhoff and the Cauchy stress tensor, and can be calculated:

Equi-biaxial configuration

The simplest biaxial configuration is the equi-biaxial configuration, where each of the two direction of load are subjected to the same stretch at the same rate. In an uncompressible isotropic material under a biaxial stress state, the non zero components of the deformation gradient tensor F are and .

According to the definition of C, its non zero components are and .

The Cauchy stress in the two directions is:

Strip biaxial configuration

Stress-stretch behaviour of a hyperelastic material in a strip biaxial configuration

A strip biaxial test is a test configuration where the stretch of one direction is confined, namely there is a zero displacement applied on that direction. The components of the C tensor become , and . It is worth nothing that even if there is no displacement along the direction 2, the stress is different from zero and it is dependent on the stretch applied on the orthogonal direction, as stated in the following equations:

The Cauchy stress in the two directions is:

The strip biaxial test has been used in different applications, such as the prediction of the behaviour of orthotropic materials under a uniaxial tensile stress, [22] delamination problems, [23] and failure analysis. [24]

FEM analysis

Finite Element Methods (FEM) are often used to obtain the material parameters. [25] [26] [27] The procedure consists of reproducing the experimental test and obtain the same stress-stretch behaviour; to do so, an iterative procedure is needed to calibrate the constitutive parameters. This kind of approach has been demonstrated to be effective to obtain the stress-stretch relationship for a wide class of hyperelastic material models (Ogden, Neo-Hooke, Yeoh, and Mooney-Rivlin).[16]

Standards

  • ISO 16842:2014 metallic materials - sheet and strip - biaxial tensile testing method using a cruciform test piece.
  • ISO 16808:2014 metallic materials - sheet and strip - determination of biaxial stress-strain curve by means of bulge test with optical measuring systems.
  • ASTM D5617 - 04(2015) - Standard Test Method for Multi-Axial Tension Test for Geosynthetics.

See also

References

  1. ^ Xiao, R. (October 2019). "A Review of Cruciform Biaxial Tensile Testing of Sheet Metals". Experimental Techniques. 43 (5): 501–520. doi:10.1007/s40799-018-00297-6.
  2. ^ Putra, Ketut B.; Tian, Xiaoqing; Plott, Jeffrey; Shih, Albert (July 2020). "Biaxial test and hyperelastic material models of silicone elastomer fabricated by extrusion-based additive manufacturing for wearable biomedical devices". Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials. 107: 103733. doi:10.1016/j.jmbbm.2020.103733.
  3. ^ Van Hemelrijck, D; Makris, A; Ramault, C; Lamkanfi, E; Van Paepegem, W; Lecompte, D (2008-10-01). "Biaxial testing of fibre-reinforced composite laminates". Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part L: Journal of Materials: Design and Applications. 222 (4): 231–239. doi:10.1243/14644207JMDA199.
  4. ^ Alaca, B. Erdem; Selby, John C.; Saif, M. T. A.; Sehitoglu, Huseyin (August 2002). "Biaxial testing of nanoscale films on compliant substrates: Fatigue and fracture". Review of Scientific Instruments. 73 (8): 2963–2970. doi:10.1063/1.1488685.
  5. ^ a b Beccarelli, Paolo (2015). "Biaxial Testing for Fabrics and Foils". doi:10.1007/978-3-319-02228-4. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ a b Holzapfel, Gerhard A.; Ogden, Ray W. (July 2009). "On planar biaxial tests for anisotropic nonlinearly elastic solids. A continuum mechanical framework". Mathematics and Mechanics of Solids. 14 (5): 474–489. doi:10.1177/1081286507084411.
  7. ^ Uhlemann, Jörg; Stranghöner, Natalie (2016). "Refined Biaxial Test Procedures for the Determination of Design Elastic Constants of Architectural Fabrics". Procedia Engineering. 155: 211–219. doi:10.1016/j.proeng.2016.08.022.
  8. ^ Redaelli, A. (2007). Biomeccanica : analisi multiscala di tessuti biologici. Bologna: Pàtron. ISBN 885553176X.
  9. ^ Soden, P.D.; Hinton, M.J.; Kaddour, A.S. (September 2002). "Biaxial test results for strength and deformation of a range of E-glass and carbon fibre reinforced composite laminates: failure exercise benchmark data". Composites Science and Technology. 62 (12–13): 1489–1514. doi:10.1016/S0266-3538(02)00093-3.
  10. ^ Welsh, J.S.; Adams, D.F. (September 2000). "Development of an electromechanical triaxial test facility for composite materials". Experimental Mechanics. 40 (3): 312–320. doi:10.1007/BF02327505.
  11. ^ Hartmann, Stefan; Gilbert, Rose Rogin; Sguazzo, Carmen (April 2018). "Basic studies in biaxial tensile tests: Biaxial tensile experiments". GAMM-Mitteilungen. 41 (1): e201800004. doi:10.1002/gamm.201800004.
  12. ^ a b Seymen, Y.; Güler, B.; Efe, M. (November 2016). "Large Strain and Small-Scale Biaxial Testing of Sheet Metals". Experimental Mechanics. 56 (9): 1519–1530. doi:10.1007/s11340-016-0185-7.
  13. ^ McCormick, Nick; Lord, Jerry (December 2010). "Digital Image Correlation". Materials Today. 13 (12): 52–54. doi:10.1016/S1369-7021(10)70235-2.
  14. ^ Guo, Hui; Chen, Yu; Tao, Junlin; Jia, Bin; Li, Dan; Zhai, Yue (September 2019). "A viscoelastic constitutive relation for the rate-dependent mechanical behavior of rubber-like elastomers based on thermodynamic theory". Materials & Design. 178: 107876. doi:10.1016/j.matdes.2019.107876.
  15. ^ a b c d e Fehervary, Heleen; Vastmans, Julie; Vander Sloten, Jos; Famaey, Nele (December 2018). "How important is sample alignment in planar biaxial testing of anisotropic soft biological tissues? A finite element study". Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials. 88: 201–216. doi:10.1016/j.jmbbm.2018.06.024.
  16. ^ a b c Fujikawa, M.; Maeda, N.; Yamabe, J.; Kodama, Y.; Koishi, M. (November 2014). "Determining Stress–Strain in Rubber with In-Plane Biaxial Tensile Tester". Experimental Mechanics. 54 (9): 1639–1649. doi:10.1007/s11340-014-9942-7.
  17. ^ Makris, A.; Vandenbergh, T.; Ramault, C.; Van Hemelrijck, D.; Lamkanfi, E.; Van Paepegem, W. (April 2010). "Shape optimisation of a biaxially loaded cruciform specimen". Polymer Testing. 29 (2): 216–223. doi:10.1016/j.polymertesting.2009.11.004.
  18. ^ Thom, Holger (August 1998). "A review of the biaxial strength of fibre-reinforced plastics". Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing. 29 (8): 869–886. doi:10.1016/S1359-835X(97)00090-0.
  19. ^ Gdoutos, Emmanuel (2002). Recent advances in experimental mechanics: in honor of Isaac M. Daniel. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 1-4020-0683-7.
  20. ^ Tobajas, Rafael; Elduque, Daniel; Ibarz, Elena; Javierre, Carlos; Gracia, Luis (2020-05-23). "A New Multiparameter Model for Multiaxial Fatigue Life Prediction of Rubber Materials". Polymers. 12 (5): 1194. doi:10.3390/polym12051194.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  21. ^ Geiger, M.; Hußnätter, W.; Merklein, M. (August 2005). "Specimen for a novel concept of the biaxial tension test". Journal of Materials Processing Technology. 167 (2–3): 177–183. doi:10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2005.05.028.
  22. ^ Komatsu, Takuya; Takatera, Masayuki; Inui, Shigeru; Shimizu, Yoshio (March 2008). "Relationship Between Uniaxial and Strip Biaxial Tensile Properties of Fabrics". Textile Research Journal. 78 (3): 224–231. doi:10.1177/0040517507083439.
  23. ^ Liechti, K. M.; Becker, E. B.; Lin, C.; Miller, T. H. (March 1989). "A fracture analysis of cathodic delamination in rubber to metal bonds". International Journal of Fracture. 39 (1–3): 217–234. doi:10.1007/BF00047451.
  24. ^ Renganathan, K.; Rao, B. Nageswara; Jana, M. K. (1999). "Failure Assessment on a Strip Biaxial Tension Specimen for a HTPB-Based Propellant Material". Propellants, Explosives, Pyrotechnics. 24 (6): 349–352. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1521-4087(199912)24:6<349::AID-PREP349>3.0.CO;2-1.
  25. ^ Budiarsa, I. Nyoman; Subagia, I.D.G. Ary; Widhiada, I. Wayan; Suardana, Ngakan P.G. (2015). "Characterization of Material Parameters by Reverse Finite Element Modelling Based on Dual Indenters Vickers and Spherical Indentation". Procedia Manufacturing. 2: 124–129. doi:10.1016/j.promfg.2015.07.022.
  26. ^ Rojicek, J. (2010-05-17). "IDENTIFICATION OF MATERIAL PARAMETRES BY FEM". MM Science Journal. 2010 (02): 186–189. doi:10.17973/MMSJ.2010_06_201008.
  27. ^ Tarantino, Angelo Marcello; Majorana, Carmelo; Luciano, Raimondo; Bacciocchi, Michele (2021-02-07). "Special Issue: "Advances in Structural Mechanics Modeled with FEM"". Materials. 14 (4): 780. doi:10.3390/ma14040780.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)