Abstract
Adhesive layers in macroscopic bonded structures typically have thicknesses ranging from several micrometers to hundreds of micrometers, where pronounced size effects, complex viscoelasticity, and cross-scale interactions severely challenge conventional mechanical modeling. This work proposes a cross-scale strain-gradient viscoelastic model grounded in strain gradient theory and the discontinuous Galerkin method. A higher-order generalized Maxwell model is formulated for adhesive bulks, while a higher-order compatible interface model is introduced to consistently capture gradient continuity across adhesive interfaces. A hybrid numerical scheme incorporating three-dimensional collocation and cross-interface elements is developed, and the resulting nonlinear system is solved using a Newton-Raphson scheme. The proposed model is verified through convergence and stability analyses and validated against analytical solutions for micron-sized bending beams and a representative cross-scale bonded structure. Size-viscoelastic interactions and model-dependent responses are quantified, and stress evolution in cross-scale bonded structures is examined. Results demonstrate that the mechanical behavior of micron-sized adhesive layers is governed by the competition between size-dependent strengthening and viscoelastic softening, the proposed model accounting for size effects predicts a faster relaxation rate than the classical viscoelastic model, and pronounced size effects induce near-elastic behavior and non-monotonic stress evolution in bonded structures.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 118970 |
| Journal | Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering |
| Volume | 457 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Aug 2026 |
Keywords
- Adhesively bonded structure
- Collocation elements
- Cross-interface elements
- Discontinuous Galerkin method
- Generalized Maxwell model
- Strain gradient viscoelasticity
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