Constitutive modelling of magneto-active polymers at finite strains: A survey
read the original abstract
Magneto-active polymers (MAPs) are field-responsive soft composites whose mechanical behaviour can be actively modified by external magnetic fields. Their ability to exhibit field-induced stiffening, magnetostriction, anisotropy and rate-dependent response makes them attractive for sensors, actuators, adaptive structures, vibration-control devices and soft robotic systems. This article presents a structured survey of constitutive modelling approaches for MAPs at finite strains. The review traces the development from early semi-empirical descriptions to thermodynamically consistent nonlinear continuum theories, with particular attention to isotropic and anisotropic magnetoelastic constitutive models, invariant-based and spectral representations, variational and polyconvex frameworks, microstructurally motivated models, dispersed-chain descriptions and magneto-viscoelastic theories. The principal constitutive variables, energy functions, coupling mechanisms and physical assumptions underlying the main models are discussed. The survey shows that constitutive modelling of MAPs has developed into a broad family of nonlinear, anisotropic and dissipative frameworks capable of describing versatile behaviours observed experimentally. Important challenges remain in resolving thermo-magneto-mechanical coupling and microstructure-sensitive effects, identification of parameters, validation of models as well as robust and efficient implementation on computers.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.