A new anisotropic elasto-plastic-damage model for quasi-brittle materials using strain energy equivalence

2021 ◽  
pp. 104163
Author(s):  
George Z. Voyiadjis ◽  
Yaneng Zhou ◽  
Peter I. Kattan
2007 ◽  
Vol 353-358 ◽  
pp. 1199-1202
Author(s):  
Usik Lee ◽  
Deokki Youn ◽  
Sang Kwon Lee

A new continuum damage theory (CDT) has been proposed by Lee et al. (1997) based on the SEEP. The CDT has the apparent advantage over the other related theories because the complete constitutive law can be readily derived by simply replacing the virgin elastic stiffness with the effective orthotropic elastic stiffness obtained by using the proposed continuum damage theory. In this paper, the CDT is evaluated by comparing the mode shapes and natural frequencies of a square plate containing a small line-through crack with those of the same plate with a damaged site replaced with the effective orthotropic elastic stiffness computed by using the CDT.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Angel Rawat ◽  
Raghu Piska ◽  
A. Rajagopal ◽  
Mokarram Hossain

Purpose This paper aims to present a nonlocal gradient plasticity damage model to demonstrate the crack pattern of a body, in an elastic and plastic state, in terms of damage law. The main objective of this paper is to reconsider the nonlocal theory by including the material in-homogeneity caused by damage and plasticity. The nonlocal nature of the strain field provides a regularization to overcome the analytical and computational problems induced by softening constitutive laws. Such an approach requires C1 continuous approximation. This is achieved by using an isogeometric approximation (IGA). Numerical examples in one and two dimensions are presented. Design/methodology/approach In this work, the authors propose a nonlocal elastic plastic damage model. The nonlocal nature of the strain field provides a regularization to overcome the analytical and computational problems induced by softening constitutive laws. An additive decomposition of strains in to elastic and inelastic or plastic part is considered. To obtain stable damage, a higher gradient order is considered for an integral equation, which is obtained by the Taylor series expansion of the local inelastic strain around the point under consideration. The higher-order continuity of nonuniform rational B-splines (NURBS) functions used in isogeometric analysis are adopted here to implement in a numerical scheme. To demonstrate the validity of the proposed model, numerical examples in one and two dimensions are presented. Findings The proposed nonlocal elastic plastic damage model is able to predict the damage in an accurate manner. The numerical results are mesh independent. The nonlocal terms add a regularization to the model especially for strain softening type of materials. The consideration of nonlocality in inelastic strains is more meaningful to the physics of damage. The use of IGA framework and NURBS basis functions add to the nonlocal nature in approximations of the field variables. Research limitations/implications The method can be extended to 3D. The model does not consider the effect of temperature and the dissipation of energy due to temperature. The method needs to be implemented for more real practical problems and compare with experimental work. This is an ongoing work. Practical implications The nonlocal models are suitable for predicting damage in quasi brittle materials. The use of elastic plastic theories allows to capture the inelastic deformations more accurately. Social implications The nonlocal models are suitable for predicting damage in quasi brittle materials. The use of elastic plastic theories allows to capture the inelastic deformations more accurately. Originality/value The present work includes the formulation and implementation of a nonlocal damage plasticity model using an isogeometric discretization, which is the novel contribution of this paper. An implicit gradient enhancement is considered to the inelastic strain. During inelastic deformations, the proposed strain tensor partitioning allows the use of a distinct potential surface and distinct failure criterion for both damage and plasticity models. The use of NURBS basis functions adds to more nonlocality in the approximation.


2005 ◽  
Vol 72 (6) ◽  
pp. 852-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Wu ◽  
S. S. Law

Many approaches on modeling of cracks in structural members have been reported in the literatures. However, most of them are explicitly developed for the purpose of studying the changes in static and dynamic responses of the structure due to the crack damage, which is a forward problem mathematically. Thereby the use of these models is inconvenient or even impossible for detecting damage in structures from vibration measurements, which is usually an inverse problem. An anisotropic damage model is proposed for a two-dimensional plate element with an edge-parallel crack. The cracked plate element is represented by a plate element with orthotropic anisotropic material expressed in terms of the virgin material stiffness and a tensor of damage variables. Instead of using the effective stress concept, strain equivalence, or strain energy equivalence principles, the vector of damage variables is identified based on the principle of equivalent static and dynamic behaviors. A nonmodel-based damage identification approach is developed incorporating the proposed anisotropic model and the estimated uniform load surface curvature (ULSC) from vibration measurements. The actual length of the crack is then predicted from the identified variables based on conservation law of potential energy for crack growth. The validity of the methodology is demonstrated by numerical examples and experiment results with comparison to results from existing strain energy equivalence theory.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (8) ◽  
pp. 1191-1202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yadong Guo ◽  
Yachuan Kuang

A new stochastic micro-mechanical damage model for quasi-brittle materials subjected to monotonic and cyclic uniaxial loading is proposed in this paper. The model uses a series of microelements endowed with simple material properties, in which plastic elements are adopted to consider and record plastic deformation, to represent the overall response of the material. The elastoplastic coupling and plastic-damage coupling, as well as the heterogeneity of the material are considered in the model. Furthermore, the model can exhibit the non-linear performance and stochastic properties of the material, and the model predictions match the experimental data well.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 1928 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faham Tahmasebinia ◽  
Chengguo Zhang ◽  
Ismet Canbulat ◽  
Samad Sepasgozar ◽  
Serkan Saydam

Coal burst occurrences are affected by a range of mining and geological factors. Excessive slipping between the strata layers may release a considerable amount of strain energy, which can be destructive. A competent strata is also more vulnerable to riveting a large amount of strain energy. If the stored energy in the rigid roof reaches a certain level, it will be released suddenly which can create a serious dynamic reaction leading to coal burst incidents. In this paper, a new damage model based on the modified thermomechanical continuum constitutive model in coal mass and the contact layers between the rock and coal mass is proposed. The original continuum constitutive model was initially developed for the cemented granular materials. The application of the modified continuum constitutive model is the key aspect to understand the momentum energy between the coal–rock interactions. The transformed energy between the coal mass and different strata layers will be analytically demonstrated as a function of the rock/joint quality interaction conditions. The failure and post failure in the coal mass and coal–rock joint interaction will be classified by the coal mass crushing, coal–rock interaction damage and fragment reorganisation. The outcomes of this paper will help to forecast the possibility of the coal burst occurrence based on the interaction between the coal mass and the strata layers in a coal mine.


Bauingenieur ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 90 (06) ◽  
pp. 252-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominik Kueres ◽  
Alexander Stark ◽  
Martin Herbrand ◽  
Martin Classen

Die numerische Simulation des Tragverhaltens von Beton- und Stahlbetonkonstruktionen mit nicht-linearen Finite-Elemente-Modellen gewinnt in der konstruktiven Ingenieurpraxis zunehmend an Bedeutung. In kommerziellen Finite-Elemente-Programmen stehen dem Anwender unterschiedliche Möglichkeiten zur Abbildung des Betonverhaltens in Form von plastischen Materialmodellen zur Verfügung. Zur Anwendung dieser Materialmodelle ist dabei in der Regel die Kenntnis des Betontragverhaltens unter einaxialer Druck- und Zugbeanspruchung erforderlich. Im vorliegenden Beitrag werden verschiedene Ansätze zur mathematischen Beschreibung dieser konstitutiven Beziehungen für Normalbeton und ultrahochfesten Beton (UHPC) vorgestellt und im Hinblick auf ihre Anwendbarkeit in plastischen Materialmodellen untersucht. Darauf aufbauend werden numerische Simulationen mit einem plastischen Schädigungsmodell unter Verwendung eines einheitlichen Parametersatzes durchgeführt und mit den Ergebnissen experimenteller Untersuchungen verglichen. Die Untersuchungen umfassen hierbei Materialprüfungen an Normalbeton und UHPC unter verschiedenen ein- und mehraxialen Spannungszuständen. Durch die Wahl geeigneter konstitutiver Beziehungen kann für die untersuchten Spannungszustände eine gute Übereinstimmung zwischen simuliertem und experimentell ermitteltem Betontragverhalten erreicht werden.


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