Shakedown theory for elastic plastic kinematic hardening bodies

2007 ◽  
Vol 23 (7) ◽  
pp. 1240-1259 ◽  
Author(s):  
P CHINH
2015 ◽  
Vol 642 ◽  
pp. 248-252
Author(s):  
Chang Hung Kuo

A finite element procedure is implemented for the elastic-plastic analysis of carbon steels subjected to reciprocating fretting contacts. The nonlinear kinematic hardening rule based on Chaboche model is used to model the cyclic plastic behavior in fretting contacts. The results show that accumulation of plastic strains, i.e. ratchetting, may occur near the contact edge while elastic shakedown is likely to take place in substrate.


1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (2) ◽  
pp. 236-245 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Jiang

This paper continues the investigation of the shakedown behavior of tubes subjected to cyclic centrifugal force and temperature, and sustained internal and external pressures. It is found that when ratchetting occurs, the plastic strain builds up with each cycle, but finally reaches a steady state after a large number of cycles for kinematic hardening materials. The steady solutions for three kinds of ratchetting behavior are found and given in this paper.


2012 ◽  
Vol 249-250 ◽  
pp. 927-930
Author(s):  
Ze Yu Wu ◽  
Xin Li Bai ◽  
Bing Ma

In finite element calculation of plastic mechanics, isotropic hardening model, kinematic hardening model and mixed hardening model have their advantages and disadvantages as well as applicability area. In this paper, by use of the tensor analysis method and mixed hardening theory in plastic mechanics, the constitutive relation of 3-D mixed hardening problem is derived in detail based on the plane mixed hardening. Numerical results show that, the proposed 3-D mixed hardening constitutive relation agrees well with the test results in existing references, and can be used in the 3-D elastic-plastic finite element analysis.


1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
pp. 577-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanyao Jiang ◽  
Huseyin Sehitoglu

Based on a stress invariant hypothesis and a stress/strain relaxation procedure, an analytical approach is forwarded for approximate determination of residual stresses and strain accumulation in elastic-plastic stress analysis of rolling contact. For line rolling contact problems, the proposed method produces residual stress distributions in favorable agreement with the existing finite element findings. It constitutes a significant improvement over the Merwin-Johnson and the McDowell-Moyar methods established earlier. The proposed approach is employed to study combined rolling and sliding for selected materials, with special attention devoted to 1070 steel behavior. Normal load determines the subsurface residual stresses and the size of the subsurface plastic zone. On the other hand, the influence of tangential force penetrates to a depth of 0.3a, where a is the half width of the contact area, and has diminishing influence on the residual stresses beyond this thin layer. A two-surface plasticity model, commensurate with nonlinear kinematic hardening, is utilized in solution of incremental surface displacements with repeated rolling. It is demonstrated that a driven wheel undergoes greater plastic deformation than the driving wheel, suggesting that the driven wheel experiences enhanced fatigue damage. Furthermore, the calculated residual stresses are compared with the existing experimental data from the literature with exceptional agreements.


1991 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 617-622 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moriaki Goya ◽  
Koichi Ito

A phenomenological corner theory was proposed for elastic-plastic materials by the authors in the previous paper (Goya and Ito, 1980). The theory was developed by introducing two transition parameters, μ (α) and β (α), which, respectively, denote the normalized magnitude and direction angle of plastic strain increments, and both monotonously vary with the direction angle of stress increments. The purpose of this report is to incorporate the Bauschinger effect into the above theory. This is achieved by the introduction of Ziegler’s kinematic hardening rule. To demonstrate the validity and applicability of a newly developed theory, we analyze the bilinear strain-path problem using the developed equation, in which, after some linear loading, the path is abruptly changed to various directions. In the calculation, specific functions, such as μ (α) = Cos (.5πα/αmax) and β (α) = (αmax- .5π) α/αmax, are chosen for the transition parameters. As has been demonstrated by numerous experimental research on this problem, the results in this report also show a distinctive decrease of the effective stress just after the change of path direction. Discussions are also made on the uniqueness of the inversion of the constitutive equation, and sufficient conditions for such uniqueness are revealed in terms of μ(α), β(α) and some work-hardening coefficients.


Author(s):  
Daniel W. Spring ◽  
Edrissa Gassama ◽  
Aaron Stenta ◽  
Jeffrey Cochran ◽  
Charles Panzarella

Neuber’s rule is commonly applied in fatigue analysis to estimate the plasticity of purely elastic FEA results. In certain cases, this is more efficient than running elastic-plastic models. However, the applicability of Neuber’s rule is not well understood for complex models and may not always be appropriate. In this paper, the applicability of Neuber’s rule is investigated. The background of Neuber’s rule is discussed, theoretical limitations are derived, and algorithmic outlines of the procedures are presented. Neuber’s plasticity correction procedure is applied to both the Ramberg-Osgood elastic-plastic constitutive relation and the advanced Chaboche isotropic/kinematic nonlinear hardening relation. Throughout the manuscript, the aspects of each model are discussed from an educational perspective, highlighting each step of the implementation in sufficient detail for independent reproduction and verification. This level of detail is often absent from similar publications and, it is hoped, may lead to the wider dissemination of Neuber’s rule for plasticity correction. The final component of the paper presents a multiaxial correction of the Chaboche hardening model. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first published application of Neuber’s rule to the multiaxial plasticity correction of the Chaboche combined isotropic/kinematic hardening model. Examples are used to illustrate the behavior of the method and to present some of the commonly overlooked components when assessing the applicability of Neuber’s method.


2008 ◽  
Vol 392-394 ◽  
pp. 980-984 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Sha ◽  
Hui Tang ◽  
Jia Zhen Zhang

In this paper, a detailed elastic-plastic finite element analysis of the effect of the compressive loading on crack tip plasticity is studied based on the material’s kinematic hardening model. Five centre-cracked panel specimens with different crack lengths are analyzed. The analysis shows that in a tension-compression loading the maximum spread of the crack tip reverse plastic zone increases with the increase of the compressive stress and the near crack tip opening displacement decreases with the increase of the compressive stress at the same nominal stress intensity factor. The applied compressive stress is the main factor controlling the near crack tip parameters.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Biplab Chatterjee ◽  
Prasanta Sahoo

The present study considers the effect of strain hardening on elastic-plastic contact of a deformable sphere with a rigid flat under full stick contact condition using commercial finite element software ANSYS. Different values of tangent modulus are considered to study the effect of strain hardening. It is found that under a full stick contact condition, strain hardening greatly influences the contact parameters. Comparison has also been made between perfect slip and full stick contact conditions. It is observed that the contact conditions have negligible effect on contact parameters. Studies on isotropic and kinematic hardening models reveal that the material with isotropic hardening has the higher load carrying capacity than that of kinematic hardening particularly for higher strain hardening.


1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 344-349
Author(s):  
K. W. Neale ◽  
Z. Nazli

The behavior of elastic-plastic plate and shell structures under repeated loading is considered. The typical problem is formulated in incremental or “rate” form, and a variational method is applied to furnish an approximate solution in a stepwise fashion. In the analysis, Ziegler’s model of kinematic hardening is adopted together with a generalization of Masing’s rule for multi-axial stress states in order to describe material response under cyclic loading. Examples of application of the analysis include cylindrical shells and circular plates subjected to cyclically varying loads. The accuracy of the approximate solution in each case is assessed through a comparison of numerical results with published experimental data for monotonic loading conditions.


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