scholarly journals Microplane Model for Concrete: II: Data Delocalization and Verification

1996 ◽  
Vol 122 (3) ◽  
pp. 255-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zdeněk P. Bažant ◽  
Yuyin Xiang ◽  
Mark D. Adley ◽  
Pere C. Prat ◽  
Stephen A. Akers
Keyword(s):  
2000 ◽  
Vol 53 (10) ◽  
pp. 265-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele Brocca ◽  
Zdeneˇk P. Bazˇant

The microplane model is a versatile constitutive model in which the stress-strain relations are defined in terms of vectors rather than tensors on planes of all possible orientations, called the microplanes, representative of the microstructure of the material. The microplane model with kinematic constraint has been successfully employed in the modeling of concrete, soils, ice, rocks, fiber composites and other quasibrittle materials. The microplane model provides a powerful and efficient numerical tool for the development and implementation of constitutive models for any kind of material. The paper presents a review of the background from which the microplane model stems, highlighting differences and similarities with other approaches. The basic structure of the microplane model is then presented, together with its extension to finite strain deformation. Three microplane models for metal plasticity are introduced and discussed. They are compared mutually and with the classical J2-flow theory for incremental plasticity by means of two examples. The first is the material response to a nonproportional loading path given by uniaxial compression into the plastic region followed by shear (typical of buckling and bifurcation problems). This example is considered in order to show the capability of the microplane model to represent a vertex on the yield surface. The second example is the ‘tube-squash’ test of a highly ductile steel tube: a finite element computation is run using two microplane models and the J2-flow theory. One of the microplane models appears to predict more accurately the final shape of the deformed tube, showing an improvement compared to the J2-flow theory even when the material is not subjected to abrupt changes in the loading path direction. This review article includes 114 references.


2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (16) ◽  
pp. 2683-2711 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joško Ožbolt ◽  
Yijun Li ◽  
Ivica Kožar

Author(s):  
Ferhun C. Caner ◽  
Zdeněk P. Bažant ◽  
Christian G. Hoover ◽  
Anthony M. Waas ◽  
Khaled W. Shahwan

A material model for the fracturing behavior for braided composites is developed and implemented in a material subroutine for use in the commercial explicit finite element code ABAQUS. The subroutine is based on the microplane model in which the constitutive behavior is defined not in terms of stress and strain tensors and their invariants but in terms of stress and strain vectors in the material mesostructure called the “microplanes.” This is a semi-multiscale model, which captures the interactions between inelastic phenomena such as cracking, splitting, and frictional slipping occurring on planes of various orientations though not the interactions at a distance. To avoid spurious mesh sensitivity due to softening, the crack band model is adopted. Its band width, related to the material characteristic length, serves as the localization limiter. It is shown that the model can realistically predict the orthotropic elastic constants and the strength limits. More importantly, the present model can also fit the tests of size effect on the strength of notched specimens and the post-peak behavior, which have been conducted for this purpose. When used in the ABAQUS software, the model gives a realistic picture of the axial crushing of a braided tube by a divergent plug.


2020 ◽  
Vol 87 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingyao Li ◽  
Xin Chen ◽  
Dong Zhou ◽  
Yewang Su

Abstract The development of constitutive models for shales has been a challenge for decades due to the difficulty of characterizing the strongly anisotropic macroscopic behavior related to the inherent mesostructure and damage mechanisms. In this paper, a spectral microplane damage model is developed for the anisotropic damage behavior of shales. The modeling challenge of the anisotropic elasticity in the microplane model is theoretically overcome by the spectral decomposition theory without limitation on the degree of the anisotropy compared with other microplane models. The stiffness tensor of anisotropic shales is effectively decomposed into four different eigenmodes with the activation of certain groups of microplanes corresponding to the specific orientation of the applied stresses. The inherent and the induced anisotropic behavior is thus characterized by proposing suitable microplane relations on certain eigenmodes directly reflecting the initial mesostructure and the failure mechanisms. For the challenge of the postpeak softening behavior, two-scalar damage variables are introduced to characterize the tensile and the shear damage related to the opening and the closure of microcracks under different stress conditions. Comparison between numerical simulation and experimental data shows that the proposed model provides satisfactory predictions for both weakly and highly anisotropic shales including prepeak nonlinear behavior, failure strengths, and postpeak softening under different confining pressures and different bedding plane orientations.


Author(s):  
Milad Shirani ◽  
Reza Mehrabi ◽  
Masood Taheri Andani ◽  
Mahmoud Kadkhodaei ◽  
Mohammad Elahinia ◽  
...  

In most of the existing SMA constitutive models, it is assumed that transformation starts when a thermodynamic driving force reaches a specified amount regardless of loading history. In this work, a phenomenological approach is used to develop an enhanced one-dimensional constitutive model in which loading history is directly considered as one of the main parameters affecting the transformation start conditions. To generalize the model to three-dimensional cases, a microplane formulation based on volumetric-deviatoric is employed. A free energy potential is defined at the microplane level, integrated over all orientations at a material point to provide the macroscopic free energy. Experiments are carried out on Nitinol superelastic tubes to validate the newly proposed constitutive model. In these experiments, interruptions are applied during transformations to show the effects of loading history on transformation start conditions. Numerical results are compared with the experimental data to demonstrate the accuracy of the enhanced model.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Rasoolinejad ◽  
Zdeněk P. Bažant

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