Viscoelastic Behaviour from Complementary Forced-Oscillation and Microcreep Tests
Abstract
There is an important complementarity between experimental methods for the study of
high-temperature viscoelasticity in the time and frequency domains that has not always been fully
exploited. Here, we show that the parallel processing of forced-oscillation data and microcreep
records, involving the consistent use of either Andrade or extended Burgers creep function models,
yields a robust composite modulus-dissipation dataset spanning a broader range of periods than
either technique alone. In fitting this dataset, the alternative Andrade and extended Burgers models
differ in their partitioning of strain between the anelastic and viscous contributions. The extended
Burgers model is preferred because it involves a finite range of anelastic relaxation times and,
accordingly, a well-defined anelastic relaxation strength. The new strategy offers the prospect of
better constraining the transition between transient and steady-state creep or, equivalently, between
anelastic and viscous behaviour.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Minerals
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description