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Rate constitutive theories for ordered thermoviscoelastic fluids: polymers
- Source :
- Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics. 26:143-181
- Publication Year :
- 2013
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.
-
Abstract
- This paper presents development of rate constitutive theories for compressible as well as in incompressible ordered thermoviscoelastic fluids, i.e., polymeric fluids in Eulerian description. The polymeric fluids in this paper are considered as ordered thermoviscoelastic fluids in which the stress rate of a desired order, i.e., the convected time derivative of a desired order ‘m’ of the chosen deviatoric Cauchy stress tensor, and the heat vector are functions of density, temperature, temperature gradient, convected time derivatives of the chosen strain tensor up to any desired order ‘n’ and the convected time derivative of up to orders ‘m−1’ of the chosen deviatoric Cauchy stress tensor. The development of the constitutive theories is presented in contravariant and covariant bases, as well as using Jaumann rates. The polymeric fluids described by these constitutive theories will be referred to as ordered thermoviscoelastic fluids due to the fact that the constitutive theories are dependent on the orders ‘m’ and ‘n’ of the convected time derivatives of the deviatoric Cauchy stress and conjugate strain tensors. The highest orders of the convected time derivative of the deviatoric Cauchy stress and strain tensors define the orders of the polymeric fluid. The admissibility requirement necessitates that the constitutive theories for the stress tensor and heat vector satisfy conservation laws, hence, in addition to conservation of mass, balance of momenta, and conservation of energy, the second law of thermodynamics, i.e., Clausius–Duhem inequality must also be satisfied by the constitutive theories or be used in their derivations. If we decompose the total Cauchy stress tensor into equilibrium and deviatoric components, then Clausius–Duhem inequality and Helmholtz free-energy density can be used to determine the equilibrium stress in terms of thermodynamic pressure for compressible fluids and in terms of mechanical pressure for incompressible fluids, but the second law of thermodynamics provides no mechanism for deriving the constitutive theories for the deviatoric Cauchy stress tensor. In the development of the constitutive theories in Eulerian description, the covariant and contravariant convected coordinate systems and Jaumann measures are natural choices. Furthermore, the mathematical models for fluids require Eulerian description in which material point displacements are not measurable. This precludes the use of displacement gradients, i.e., strain measures, in the development of the constitutive theories. It is shown that compatible conjugate pairs of convected time derivatives of the deviatoric Cauchy stress and strain measures in co-, contravariant and Jaumann bases in conjunction with the theory of generators and invariants provide a general mathematical framework for the development of constitutive theories for ordered thermofluids in Eulerian description. This framework has a foundation based on the basic principles and axioms of continuum mechanics, but the resulting constitutive theories for the deviatoric Cauchy stress tensor must satisfy the condition of positive work expanded, a requirement resulting from the entropy inequality. The paper presents a general theory of constitutive equations for ordered thermoviscoelastic fluids which is then specialized to obtain commonly used constitutive equations for Maxwell, Giesekus and Oldroyd-B constitutive models in contra- and covariant bases and using Jaumann rates.
- Subjects :
- Continuum mechanics
Cauchy stress tensor
Mathematical analysis
Constitutive equation
General Physics and Astronomy
Infinitesimal strain theory
Physics::Fluid Dynamics
Stress (mechanics)
Cauchy elastic material
Classical mechanics
Mechanics of Materials
Covariance and contravariance of vectors
General Materials Science
Covariant transformation
Mathematics
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14320959 and 09351175
- Volume :
- 26
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........4d86d27b25f1822ab116e6fa13e31f0b
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00161-013-0295-8