| Authors: | Cajić, Milan Karličić, Danilo Paunović, Stepa |
Affiliations: | Mechanics Mathematical Institute of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts |
Title: | Electro-mechanical behaviour of fractional viscoelastic and anisotropic dielectric elastomers | Conference: | 12th European Solid Mechanics Conference, 2025, Lyon, France | Issue Date: | 2025 | Rank: | M34 | URL: | https://esmc2025.sciencesconf.org/597302/document | Abstract: | Dielectric elastomers, widely used as smart materials in soft actuators (1), face significant challenges that limit their performance. Fiber-reinforced dielectric elastomers, with their anisotropic behavior, offer enhanced mechanical properties, such as faster response rates under electric fields (2). While many studies incorporate hyperelasticity and anisotropy, time-dependent viscoelastic effects are often included to improve material models. Classical viscoelastic models can describe these effects accurately in specific cases, but fractional vis- coelasticity offers a more powerful alternative. By assuming a power-law relaxation spectrum, fractional viscoelasticity reduces the number of required parameters while effectively captur- ing a continuous distribution of timescales (3). This study presents a unified framework for modeling the coupled nonlinear electro-mechanical behavior of fiber-reinforced anisotropic di- electric elastomers with fractional viscoelastic effects. The approach builds on an anisotropic hyperelastic nearly-incompressible model and employs a multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient, incorporating fractional viscoelasticity to model time-dependent me- chanical responses with minimal number of additional parameters. The weak form is derived for efficient numerical implementation using the open-source finite element platform FEn- iCSx. Validation through dynamic deformation simulations, including electro-mechanical instability and bending, demonstrates the favorable influence of anisotropy on actuation performance, the capability of fractional viscoelasticity to capture complex time-dependent behavior, and the computational efficiency of the developed framework. This work provides a foundation for future extensions to thermal and magnetic couplings, advancing the modeling of soft active materials. |
Publisher: | EUROMECH |
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