Shear bands in soil deformation processes

Author(s):  
D Lesniewska ◽  
Z Mroz
2008 ◽  
Vol 35 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 11-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernando Alonso-Marroquin ◽  
Hans Muhlhaus ◽  
Hans Herrmann

The mechanical behavior of soils has been traditionally described using continuum-mechanics-based models. These are empirical relations based on laboratory tests of soil specimens. The investigation of the soils at the grain scale using discrete element models has become possible in recent years. These models have provided valuable understanding of many micromechanical aspects of soil deformation. The aim of this work is to draw together these two approaches in the investigation of the plastic deformation of non-cohesive soils. A simple discrete element model has been used to evaluate the effect of anisotropy, force chains, and sliding contacts on different aspects of soil plasticity: dilatancy, shear bands, ratcheting etc. The discussion of these aspects raises important questions such as the width of shear bands, the origin of the stress-dilatancy relation, and the existence of a purely elastic regime in the deformation of granular materials.


2008 ◽  
Vol 22 (09n11) ◽  
pp. 1343-1348
Author(s):  
HIROAKI NAKAMOTO ◽  
TADAHARU ADACHI ◽  
WAKAKO ARAKI

The in-plane impact behaviors of honeycomb structures with some cells randomly filled with stiff inclusions were analyzed by using the finite element method (FEM). The effect of the random arrangement of inclusions on the deformation processes of the honeycomb structures was considered. During these deformation processes, the growth of shear bands was disturbed by the inclusions and the cell region surrounded by inclusions did not deform. The average stress increased and densification strain decreased with increasing volume fraction of inclusions. A honeycomb with volume fraction of inclusions of 0.5 could not be deformed. Below 0.5, the average stress steeply increased and densification strain approached zero. Some models for less than a volume fraction of inclusions of 0.25 had higher absorbed energy than the model with no inclusions and others had lower energy. Above 0.25, the absorbed energy decreased and linearly reached zero at a volume fraction of inclusions of 0.5.


2000 ◽  
Vol 627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prabhu R. Nott ◽  
K. Kesava Rao ◽  
L. Srinivasa Mohan

ABSTRACTThe slow flow of granular materials is often marked by the existence of narrow shear layers, adjacent to large regions that suffer little or no deformation. This behaviour, in the regime where shear stress is generated primarily by the frictional interactions between grains, has so far eluded theoretical description. In this paper, we present a rigid-plastic frictional Cosserat model that captures thin shear layers by incorporating a microscopic length scale. We treat the granular medium as a Cosserat continuum, which allows the existence of localised couple stresses and, therefore, the possibility of an asymmetric stress tensor. In addition, the local rotation is an independent field variable and is not necessarily equal to the vorticity. The angular momentum balance, which is implicitly satisfied for a classical continuum, must now be solved in conjunction with the linear momentum balances. We extend the critical state model, used in soil plasticity, for a Cosserat continuum and obtain predictions for flow in plane and cylindrical Couette devices. The velocity profile predicted by our model is in qualitative agreement with available experimental data. In addition, our model can predict scaling laws for the shear layer thickness as a function of the Couette gap, which must be verified in future experiments. Most significantly, our model can determine the velocity field in viscometric flows, which classical plasticity-based model cannot.


2013 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 1207-1212
Author(s):  
E.S. Dzidowski

Abstract The causes of plane crashes, stemming from the subcritical growth of fatigue cracks, are examined. It is found that the crashes occurred mainly because of the negligence of the defects arising in the course of secondary metalworking processes. It is shown that it is possible to prevent such damage, i.e. voids, wedge cracks, grain boundary cracks, adiabatic shear bands and flow localization, through the use of processing maps indicating the ranges in which the above defects arise and the ranges in which safe deformation mechanisms, such as deformation in dynamic recrystallization conditions, superplasticity, globularization and dynamic recovery, occur. Thanks to the use of such maps the processes can be optimized by selecting proper deformation rates and forming temperatures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. 619-633
Author(s):  
Igor Shardakov ◽  
Irina Glot ◽  
Aleksey Shestakov ◽  
Roman Tsvetkov ◽  
Valeriy Yepin ◽  
...  

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