scholarly journals Effective potentials in nonlinear polycrystals and quadrature formulae

Author(s):  
Jean-Claude Michel ◽  
Pierre Suquet

This study presents a family of estimates for effective potentials in nonlinear polycrystals. Noting that these potentials are given as averages, several quadrature formulae are investigated to express these integrals of nonlinear functions of local fields in terms of the moments of these fields. Two of these quadrature formulae reduce to known schemes, including a recent proposition (Ponte Castañeda 2015 Proc. R. Soc. A 471 , 20150665 ( doi:10.1098/rspa.2015.0665 )) obtained by completely different means. Other formulae are also reviewed that make use of statistical information on the fields beyond their first and second moments. These quadrature formulae are applied to the estimation of effective potentials in polycrystals governed by two potentials, by means of a reduced-order model proposed by the authors (non-uniform transformation field analysis). It is shown how the quadrature formulae improve on the tangent second-order approximation in porous crystals at high stress triaxiality. It is found that, in order to retrieve a satisfactory accuracy for highly nonlinear porous crystals under high stress triaxiality, a quadrature formula of higher order is required.

1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (4) ◽  
pp. 327-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
George J. Dvorak

Some recent theoretical and experimental results on modeling of the inelastic behavior of composite materials are reviewed. The transformation field analysis method (G. J. Dvorak, Proc. R. Soc. London, Series A437, 1992, pp. 311–327) is a general procedure for evaluation of local fields and overall response in representative volumes of multiphase materials subjected to external thermomechanical loads and transformations in the phases. Applications are presented for systems with elastic-plastic and viscoelastic constituents. The Kroner-Budiansky-Wu and the Hill self-consistent models are corrected to conform with the generalized Levin formula. Recent experimental measurements of yield surfaces and plastic strains on thin-walled boron-aluminum composite tubes are interpreted with several micromechanical models. The comparisons show that unit cell models can provide reasonably accurate predictions of the observed plastic strains, while models relying on normality of the plastic strain increment vector to a single overall yield surface may not capture the essential features of the inelastic deformation process.


2016 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 501-504 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Zhong ◽  
T. Xu ◽  
K. Guan ◽  
L. Huang

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