The Ogden material model is a
hyperelastic material model used to describe the non-linear
stress–
strain behaviour of complex materials such as rubbers,
polymers
A polymer () is a substance or material that consists of very large molecules, or macromolecules, that are constituted by many repeating subunits derived from one or more species of monomers. Due to their broad spectrum of properties, b ...
, and
biological tissue
In biology, tissue is an assembly of similar cells and their extracellular matrix from the same embryonic origin that together carry out a specific function. Tissues occupy a biological organizational level between cells and a complete or ...
. The model was developed by
Raymond Ogden in 1972.
[Ogden, R. W., (1972). ''Large Deformation Isotropic Elasticity – On the Correlation of Theory and Experiment for Incompressible Rubberlike Solids'', Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, Vol. 326, No. 1567 (1 February 1972), pp. 565–584.] The Ogden model, like other
hyperelastic material models, assumes that the material behaviour can be described by means of a
strain energy density function
A strain energy density function or stored energy density function is a scalar (mathematics), scalar-valued function (mathematics), function that relates the strain energy density of a material to the deformation gradient.
:
W = \hat(\boldsy ...
, from which the stress–strain relationships can be derived.
Ogden material model
In the Ogden material model, the
strain energy density is expressed in terms of the principal stretches
,
as:
:
where
,
and
are material constants. Under the assumption of incompressibility one can rewrite as
In general the shear modulus results from
With
and by fitting the material parameters, the material behaviour of rubbers can be described very accurately. For particular values of material constants the Ogden model will reduce to either the
Neo-Hookean solid (
,
) or the
Mooney-Rivlin material (
,
,
, with the constraint condition
).
Using the Ogden material model, the three principal values of the Cauchy stresses can now be computed as
.
Uniaxial tension
We now consider an incompressible material under uniaxial tension, with the stretch ratio given as
, where
is the stretched length and
is the original unstretched length. The pressure
is determined from incompressibility and boundary condition
, yielding:
.
Equi-biaxial tension
Considering an incompressible material under eqi-biaxial tension, with
. The pressure
is determined from incompressibility, and boundary condition
, gives:
.
Other hyperelastic models
For rubber and biological materials, more sophisticated models are necessary. Such materials may exhibit a non-linear stress–strain behaviour at modest strains, or are elastic up to huge strains. These complex non-linear stress–strain behaviours need to be accommodated by specifically tailored strain-energy density functions.
The simplest of these hyperelastic models, is the
Neo-Hookean solid.
where
is the shear modulus, which can be determined by experiments. From experiments it is known that for rubbery materials under moderate straining up to 30–70%, the Neo-Hookean model usually fits the material behaviour with sufficient accuracy. To model rubber at high strains, the one-parametric Neo-Hookean model is replaced by more general models, such as the
Mooney-Rivlin solid where the strain energy
is a linear combination of two invariants
The Mooney-Rivlin material was originally also developed for rubber, but is today often applied to model (incompressible) biological tissue. For modeling rubbery and biological materials at even higher strains, the more sophisticated Ogden material model has been developed.
References
* F. Cirak: Lecture Notes for ''5R14: Non-linear solid mechanics'', University of Cambridge.
* R.W. Ogden: ''Non-Linear Elastic Deformations'', {{ISBN, 0-486-69648-0
Continuum mechanics
Solid mechanics