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  1. Kelvin–Voigt material - Wikipedia

    • A Kelvin–Voigt material, also called a Voigt material, is the most simple model viscoelastic material showing typical rubbery properties. It is purely elastic on long timescales (slow deformation), but shows additional resistance to fast deformation. The model was developed independently by the British physicist Lord Kelvin in 1865 and by the German physicist … See more

    Definition

    The Kelvin–Voigt model, also called the Voigt model, is represented by a purely viscous damper and purely elastic spring connected in parallel as shown in the picture.
    If, instead, … See more

    Effect of a sudden stress

    If we suddenly apply some constant stress to Kelvin–Voigt material, then the deformations would approach the deformation for the pure elastic material with the difference decaying exponentially:
    where t is ti… See more

     
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  2. The generalized Kelvin–Voigt model is used to simulate viscoelastic deformation in a wide range of materials such as concrete, biological tissues and glassy polymers.
    Learn more:
    The generalized Kelvin–Voigt model is used to simulate viscoelastic deformation in a wide range of materials such as concrete, biological tissues and glassy polymers.
    doc.comsol.com/5.6/doc/com.comsol.help.sme/sm…
    The Kelvin-Voigt (KV) model is one of the simplest approaches to adding damping to a single degree of freedom (SDOF) system and it involves adding a purely viscous damper in parallel to an elastic spring, so that the strains in the spring and the damper are equal.
    www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/kelvin-v…
    The Kelvin-Voigt model represents viscoelastic behavior through the parallel combination of a purely elastic element (spring) and a purely viscous element (dashpot). The spring illustrates the material’s elasticity – its ability to return to its original shape after deformation.
    modern-physics.org/kelvin-voigt-material-model/
    A generalization of the Kelvin–Voigt model that can represent viscoelastic materials whose moduli depend on the mechanical pressure is derived from an implicit constitutive relation in which both the Cauchy stress and the linearized strain appear linearly.
    onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/mma.9417
     
  3. Kelvin-Voigt Model - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

     
  4. Viscoelastic models revisited: characteristics and interconversion ...

  5. Generalized Kelvin-Voigt viscoelastic modeling and numerical …

  6. (PDF) On Kelvin-Voigt model and its generalizations

    Jun 1, 2012 · We consider a generalization of the Kelvin-Voigt model where the elastic part of the Cauchy stress depends non-linearly on the linearized strain and the dissipative part of the Cauchy stress is...

  7. Linear Viscoelastic Materials - COMSOL Multiphysics

    The generalized Kelvin–Voigt model is used to simulate viscoelastic deformation in a wide range of materials such as concrete, biological tissues and glassy polymers.

  8. Generalized Kelvin Voigt Model - MOOSE

  9. A generalization of the Kelvin–Voigt model with …

  10. Generalized Kelvin Voigt Model | BISON - MOOSE

  11. High-fidelity-generalized-method-of-cells micromechanical …

  12. On Kelvin-Voigt model and its generalizations - Evolution …

  13. Linear Viscoelastic Materials - COMSOL Multiphysics

  14. Turbulent flows as generalized Kelvin–Voigt materials: Modeling …

  15. Kelvin-Voigt Model | Viscoelasticity, Stress-Strain & Damping

  16. Generalized Kelvin-Voigt Model (LAW35) - Altair

  17. Linear Viscoelasticity - COMSOL Multiphysics