A modified Lemke Algorithm for dynamic rigid plastic response of skeletal structures

2021 ◽  
Vol 256 ◽  
pp. 106638
Author(s):  
Azam Khan ◽  
Irshad Ahmad ◽  
Wajid Khan ◽  
Niaz Bahadur Khan ◽  
Muhammad Aslam
Author(s):  
William James Stronge ◽  
Tongxi Yu

1988 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
pp. 371-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Hill

AbstractCategories of rigid/plastic response are investigated along arbitrary paths of homogeneous deformation. Successive yield surfaces are presumed to be convex and self-similar relative to certain canonical measures of stress and finite strain. After a general analysis attention is focussed on path-sensitive response in configurations where the canonical rate of hardening vanishes. The analysis is subsequently extended to other types of eigenstate, especially those associated with actual or prospective loading devices. The results are illustrated in the context of formability tests on sheet metal.


Author(s):  
R. Hill

AbstractThe classical specification of elastic/plastic or rigid/plastic response in metals is reformulated in generalized variables. The allowed measures of strain are sets of any geometric magnitudes that jointly determine the shape of a material element; the allowed measures of stress are generated by work-conjugacy. The choice of variables affects the parameters and qualitative features of the constitutive framework; these dependences are made explicit by concise formulae of transformation.Eigenstates intrinsic to the material are considered wherein the strain can change while the conjugate stress is either stationary or coupled differentially with the strain. Such configurations are associated with incipient branching of the strain response to a prescribed variation of the conjugate stress. Sensitivity to the loading environment is evaluated for both elastic/plastic and rigid/plastic materials. This synoptic approach to eigenproblems is illustrated in the context of materials testing.


2013 ◽  
Vol 535-536 ◽  
pp. 493-496
Author(s):  
F.L. Chen ◽  
T.X. Yu ◽  
J.L. Yang ◽  
W.H. Wu

To examine the effect of elasticity in dynamic response of imperfect structures, by densely setting meshes in the vicinity of the imperfections, pre-cracked beams impinged by a striker are modeled and numerically investigated. The dynamic response patterns and failure history for two specific configurations are obtained. It is found that complex alternations of the elastic-plastic stress distribution exhibit, and the striker is rebounded and then separated from the beam, which well reflects the effect of material elasticity. The high stress and large deformation zones, corresponding to the plastic hinges in the rigid-plastic model, appear at the impinging position and the supporting ends, and the locations coincide with those in the modal pattern in rigid-plastic response. From comparison, it is concluded that when the impinging is intense, despite the effect of elasticity displaying in the early stage, the widely employed rigid-plastic analysis is still capable of providing favorable prediction on the final response parameters.


2000 ◽  
Vol 627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prabhu R. Nott ◽  
K. Kesava Rao ◽  
L. Srinivasa Mohan

ABSTRACTThe slow flow of granular materials is often marked by the existence of narrow shear layers, adjacent to large regions that suffer little or no deformation. This behaviour, in the regime where shear stress is generated primarily by the frictional interactions between grains, has so far eluded theoretical description. In this paper, we present a rigid-plastic frictional Cosserat model that captures thin shear layers by incorporating a microscopic length scale. We treat the granular medium as a Cosserat continuum, which allows the existence of localised couple stresses and, therefore, the possibility of an asymmetric stress tensor. In addition, the local rotation is an independent field variable and is not necessarily equal to the vorticity. The angular momentum balance, which is implicitly satisfied for a classical continuum, must now be solved in conjunction with the linear momentum balances. We extend the critical state model, used in soil plasticity, for a Cosserat continuum and obtain predictions for flow in plane and cylindrical Couette devices. The velocity profile predicted by our model is in qualitative agreement with available experimental data. In addition, our model can predict scaling laws for the shear layer thickness as a function of the Couette gap, which must be verified in future experiments. Most significantly, our model can determine the velocity field in viscometric flows, which classical plasticity-based model cannot.


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