Cohesive zone models do not consider the lateral contraction of adhesive
layers under tensile loads. The constraint of the lateral contraction by the
adherents which depends on the geometry of the adhesive layer has a major
influence on the normal stiffness of the joint. Two methods to improve the
accuracy of the stiffness of cohesive zone models of rectangular adhesive
layers are proposed in this paper. Both approaches use existing closed-form
solutions for rectangular elastic layers between rigid plates. The first
assigns an effective stiffness to the entire cohesive zone, the second approach
defines a spatially varying stiffness to account for the difference in
constraint of the adhesive close to the free surfaces and in the centre of the
layer. The accuracy in joint stiffness for cohesive zone models gained by the
two methods is tested in two extensive parametric studies considering both
rigid and flexible adherents