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Type of viscoelastic material
A Burgers material is a viscoelastic material having the properties both of elasticity and viscosity . It is named after the Dutch physicist Johannes Martinus Burgers .
Maxwell representation [ edit ]
Schematic diagram of Burgers material, Maxwell representation
Given that one Maxwell material has an elasticity
E
1
{\displaystyle E_{1}}
and viscosity
η
1
{\displaystyle \eta _{1}}
, and the other Maxwell material has an elasticity
E
2
{\displaystyle E_{2}}
and viscosity
η
2
{\displaystyle \eta _{2}}
, the Burgers model has the constitutive equation
σ
+
(
η
1
E
1
+
η
2
E
2
)
σ
˙
+
η
1
η
2
E
1
E
2
σ
¨
=
(
η
1
+
η
2
)
ε
˙
+
η
1
η
2
(
E
1
+
E
2
)
E
1
E
2
ε
¨
{\displaystyle \sigma +\left({\frac {\eta _{1}}{E_{1}}}+{\frac {\eta _{2}}{E_{2}}}\right){\dot {\sigma }}+{\frac {\eta _{1}\eta _{2}}{E_{1}E_{2}}}{\ddot {\sigma }}=\left(\eta _{1}+\eta _{2}\right){\dot {\varepsilon }}+{\frac {\eta _{1}\eta _{2}\left(E_{1}+E_{2}\right)}{E_{1}E_{2}}}{\ddot {\varepsilon }}}
where
σ
{\displaystyle \sigma }
is the stress and
ε
{\displaystyle \varepsilon }
is the strain.
Kelvin representation [ edit ]
Schematic diagram of Burgers material, Kelvin representation
Given that the Kelvin material has an elasticity
E
1
{\displaystyle E_{1}}
and viscosity
η
1
{\displaystyle \eta _{1}}
, the spring has an elasticity
E
2
{\displaystyle E_{2}}
and the dashpot has a viscosity
η
2
{\displaystyle \eta _{2}}
, the Burgers model has the constitutive equation
σ
+
(
η
1
E
1
+
η
2
E
1
+
η
2
E
2
)
σ
˙
+
η
1
η
2
E
1
E
2
σ
¨
=
η
2
ε
˙
+
η
1
η
2
E
1
ε
¨
{\displaystyle \sigma +\left({\frac {\eta _{1}}{E_{1}}}+{\frac {\eta _{2}}{E_{1}}}+{\frac {\eta _{2}}{E_{2}}}\right){\dot {\sigma }}+{\frac {\eta _{1}\eta _{2}}{E_{1}E_{2}}}{\ddot {\sigma }}=\eta _{2}{\dot {\varepsilon }}+{\frac {\eta _{1}\eta _{2}}{E_{1}}}{\ddot {\varepsilon }}}
where
σ
{\displaystyle \sigma }
is the stress and
ε
{\displaystyle \varepsilon }
is the strain.[ 1]
Model characteristics [ edit ]
Comparison of creep and stress relaxation for three and four element models
This model incorporates viscous flow into the standard linear solid model , giving a linearly increasing asymptote for strain under fixed loading conditions.
^ Malkin, Alexander Ya.; Isayev, Avraam I. (2006). Rheology: Concepts, Methods, and Applications . ChemTec Publishing. pp. 59–60. ISBN 9781895198331 .