Can Software Calculate Creep and Stress Relaxation in Spring-Damper Models?

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Software capable of calculating creep and stress relaxation for models of springs and dampers includes Matlab/Simulink and Mathematica, which can handle the inverse Laplace transform of constitutive equations. Users can model components in the s-domain to derive the necessary equations. Concerns arise when modeling systems without a free extremity, complicating the application of the Heaviside step function. By converting components into impedances, it is possible to combine them and determine displacement as a function of load. This approach can effectively address the challenges presented in the model.
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Hi all, I have a question.

Does exists a software that is able to calculate creep and stress relaxation of a model of springs and dampers?

Is Matlab/Simulink able to do this?

Thanks in advance.
 
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Hi Stealth101, welcome to PF. If you're able to put the components' constitutive equations together in the s-domain, any symbolic software should be able to find the inverse Laplace transform, which will give you the equations you're looking for. Mathematica can do it, certainly; I'm pretty sure the Matlab can also, but I don't have that immediately at hand.
 
Mapes said:
If you're able to put the components' constitutive equations together.

I have some doubts about the equations, because I have to study a model without a free "extremity" so I can't apply the Heaviside step function in the classic way.

Practically this model has the "chassis" both on the right side and left side.

I'm sorry for my poor English.
 
Still, if you can turn all the components into impedances (k for springs, for dashpots), hopefully you can combine them like springs and get displacement as a function of load.
 

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