A rate and temperature dependent unified creep-plasticity model for high strength steel and solder alloys

2017 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 35-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu He ◽  
Yao Yao ◽  
Leon M. Keer
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-218
Author(s):  
D. Sokołowski ◽  
M. Kamiński

Abstract The main aim of this work is a computational nonlinear analysis of a high strength steel corrugated-web plate girder with a very detailed and realistic mesh including vertical ribs, all the fillet welds and supporting areas. The analysis is carried out to verify mechanical structural response under transient fire temperature conditions accounting for an efficiency and accuracy of three various transient coupled thermo-elastic models. All the resulting stress distributions, deformation modes and their time variations, critical loads and eigenfrequencies as well as failure times are compared in all these models. Nonlinearities include material, geometrical and contact phenomena up to the temperature fluctuations together with temperature-dependent constitutive relations for high strength steel. They result partially from steady state and transient experimental tests or from the additional designing rules included in Eurocodes. A fire scenario includes an application of the normative fire gas temperature curve on the bottom flange of the entire girder for a period of 180 minutes. It is computed using sequentially coupled thermo-elastic Finite Element Method analyses. These account for heat conductivity, radiation and convection. The FEM model consists of a combination of 3D hexahedral and tetrahedral solid finite elements and uses temperature-dependent material and physical parameters, whose values are taken after the experiments presented in Eurocodes. Numerical results presented here demonstrate a fundamental role of the lower flange in carrying fire loads according to this scenario and show a contribution of the ribs and of the welds to the strength of the entire structure.


2013 ◽  
Vol 535-536 ◽  
pp. 385-388
Author(s):  
Naoko Saito ◽  
Mitsugi Fukahori ◽  
Daisuke Hisano ◽  
Yuya Ichikawa ◽  
Hiroshi Hamasaki ◽  
...  

Stress-strain responses of a high strength steel sheet of 980MPa grade under uniaxial tension and its springback in V- and U-bending were investigated at elevated temperatures ranging from 573-973K. The flow stress decreased drastically with the increase of temperature, from which it was expected that springback is reduced by warm forming. In V-bending test, however, the temperature effect on springback was not so clear, while in U-bending springback decreased with temperature rise. It was found that such difference in temperature dependent springback behavior between V- and U-bending was caused by stress relaxation which took place during unloading process.


Author(s):  
Wei Tong

An accurate description of the directional dependence of uniaxial tensile yielding and plastic flow in advanced high-strength steel sheets may require either a nonassociated plasticity model with separate quadratic yield function and flow potential or an associated plasticity model with nonquadratic yield function. In this paper, Gotoh's fourth-order homogeneous polynomial yield function is applied to model two advanced high-strength steel sheets in an associated plasticity model. Both the parameter selection for calibrating Gotoh's yield function and its positivity and convexity verification are given in some detail. Similarities and differences between the associated plasticity model presented here and the nonassociated one appeared in the literature are discussed in terms of the directional dependence of yield stresses and plastic strain ratios under uniaxial tension and yield stresses under biaxial tension loading.


2015 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 07008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhengyang Cai ◽  
Keshan Diao ◽  
Xiangdong Wu ◽  
Min Wan ◽  
Cheng Cheng

2012 ◽  
Vol 79 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sunil Neupane ◽  
Samer Adeeb ◽  
Roger Cheng ◽  
James Ferguson ◽  
Michael Martens

The design equations for pipelines subjected to both internal pressure and longitudinal loading are based on the isotropic hardening plasticity model. However, high strength steel (HSS) pipelines exhibit plastic anisotropy, which cannot be incorporated in the traditional isotropic hardening plasticity model. The stress strain behaviors of HSS in the longitudinal and the circumferential directions are different. Thus, it would not be desirable to adopt the same design equations based on the isotropic hardening plasticity model for HSS pipelines. The design equations of HSS steel pipelines have to be developed by solving numerical models incorporating a suitable material plasticity constitutive model for the HSS that can deal with the exhibited plastic anisotropy. In this paper, various plasticity models are studied and an appropriate plasticity model is adopted and calibrated to model the plastic anisotropy exhibited by the HSS.


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