• Title/Summary/Keyword: anisotropic damage models

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Numerical analysis of blast-induced anisotropic rock damage (터발파압력에 기인한 이방성 암반손상의 수치해석적 분석)

  • Park, Bong-Ki;Cho, Kook-Hwan;Lee, In-Mo
    • Journal of Korean Tunnelling and Underground Space Association
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.291-302
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    • 2004
  • Blast-induced anisotropic rock damage around a blast-hole was analyzed by a using numerical method with user-defined subroutine based on continuum damage mechanics. Anisotropic blasting pressure was evaluated by applying anisotropic ruck characteristics to analytical solution which is a function of explosive and rock properties. Anisotropic rock damage was evaluated by applying the proposed anisotropic blasting pressure. Blast-induced isotropic rock damage was also analyzed. User-defined subroutines to solve anisotropic and isotropic damage model were coded. Initial rock damages in natural ruck were considered in anisotropic and isotropic damage models. Blasting pressure and elastic modulus of rock were major influential parameters from parametric analysis results of isotropic rock damage. From the results of anisotropic rock damage analysis, blasting pressure was the most influential parameter. Anisotropic rock damage area in horizontal direction was approximately 34% larger and about 12% smaller in vertical direction comparing with isotropic rock damage area. Isotropic rock damage area under fully coupled charge condition was around 30 times larger than that under decoupled charge condition. Blasting pressure under fully coupled charge condition was estimated to be more than 10 times larger than that of decoupled charge condition.

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A study of dynamic responses of incorporating damaged materials and structures

  • Zhang, Wohua;Chen, Yunmin;Jin, Yi
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.139-156
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    • 2000
  • This paper concerns the development of a computational model for the damage evolution of engineering materials under dynamic loading. Two models describing the anisotropic damage evolution of a material are presented; the first is based on a power function of the effective equivalent stress and the second on the damage strain energy release rate. The methods for computing the damage accumulated in structural components and their implementation in a finite element programme are presented together with some numerical results. The dynamic response of a damaged structural component and the dynamic behaviour of a damaged material have been studied numerically. This study shows that the frequency spectrum of a damaged structure is down-shifted, while the damping ratio of damaged materials becomes higher, the amplitude of the response significantly increases and the resonance ensuing from the damage growth still occurs in a damaged structure.

Elasto-Plastic Anisotropic-Damage Model for Concrete (콘크리트의 탄-소성 이방성-손상 모델)

  • 이기성;송하원
    • Computational Structural Engineering
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.65-76
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    • 1996
  • The initiation and growth of microcracks or microvoids inside concrete results in the progressive degradation of concrete. This damage processing along processing along with plastic deformation is main cause of nonlinear behavior of concrete. In this study, a continuum damage model of concrete is developed for the analysis of the nonlinear behavior of concrete due to damage and elasto-plastic deformation. Anisotropic damage tensor is used to describe the anisotropy of concrete and hypothesis of equivalent elastic energy is used to define the effective elastic tensor. The damage model including the damage evolution law and constitutive equation is derived with damage variable and damage surface which is defined by damage energy release rate by using the Helmholtz free energy and dissipation potential based on the thermodynamic principles. By adopting a typical plasticity model of concrete, plasticity of concrete is included to this model. Afinite element analysis program implemented with this model was developed and finite element analysis was performed for the analyses of concrete subjected to uniaxial and biaxial loadings. Comparison of the results of analysis with those of experiments and other models shows that the model successfully predicts the nonlinear behavior of concrete.

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Modelling reinforced concrete beams under mixed shear-tension failure with different continuous FE approaches

  • Marzec, Ireneusz;Skarzynski, Lukasz;Bobinski, Jerzy;Tejchman, Jacek
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.12 no.5
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    • pp.585-612
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    • 2013
  • The paper presents quasi-static numerical simulations of the behaviour of short reinforced concrete beams without shear reinforcement under mixed shear-tension failure using the FEM and four various constitutive continuum models for concrete. First, an isotropic elasto-plastic model with a Drucker-Prager criterion defined in compression and with a Rankine criterion defined in tension was used. Next, an anisotropic smeared crack and isotropic damage model were applied. Finally, an elasto-plastic-damage model was used. To ensure mesh-independent FE results, to describe strain localization in concrete and to capture a deterministic size effect, all models were enhanced in a softening regime by a characteristic length of micro-structure by means of a non-local theory. Bond-slip between concrete and reinforcement was considered. The numerical results were directly compared with the corresponding laboratory tests performed by Walraven and Lehwalter (1994). The advantages and disadvantages of enhanced models to model the reinforced concrete behaviour were outlined.

Fundamental thermodynamic concepts for the constitutive modeling of damaged concrete

  • Park, Tae-Hyo;Park, Jae-Min;An, Tae-Song
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2004.05a
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    • pp.648-651
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    • 2004
  • Many damage models has been developed to express the degradation of materials. However, only minor damage model for concrete has been developed because of the heterogeneity of it unlike metals. To model the damaged behavior of concrete, this peculiarity as well as a load-induced anisotropic feature must be considered. In this paper, basic concepts of the thermodynamic theory is investigated to model the behavior of the damaged concrete in the phenomenological viewpoint. And the general constitutive relations and damage evolution equations are investigated too.

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Damage mechanics approach and modeling nonuniform cracking within finite elements for safety evaluation of concrete dams in 3D space

  • Mirzabozorg, H.;Kianoush, R.;Jalalzadeh, B.
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.33 no.1
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    • pp.31-46
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    • 2009
  • An anisotropic damage mechanics approach is introduced which models the static and dynamic behavior of mass concrete in 3D space. The introduced numerical approach is able to model non-uniform cracking within the cracked element due to cracking in Gaussian points of elements. The validity of the proposed model is considered using available experimental and theoretical results under the static and dynamic loads. No instability and stress locking is observed in the conducted analyses. The Morrow Point dam is analyzed including dam-reservoir interaction effects to consider the nonlinear seismic behavior of the dam. It is found that the resulting crack profiles are in good agreement with those obtained from the smeared crack approach. It is concluded that the proposed model can be used in nonlinear static and dynamic analysis of concrete dams in 3D space and enables engineers to define the damage level of these infrastructures. The performance level of the considered system is used to assess the static and seismic safety using the defined performance based criteria.

Two-way fluid-structure interaction simulation for steady-state vibration of a slender rod using URANS and LES turbulence models

  • Nazari, Tooraj;Rabiee, Ataollah;Kazeminejad, Hossein
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.51 no.2
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    • pp.573-578
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    • 2019
  • Anisotropic distribution of the turbulent kinetic energy and the near-field excitations are the main causes of the steady state Flow-Induced Vibration (FIV) which could lead to fretting wear damage in vertically arranged supported slender rods. In this article, a combined Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and Computational Structural Mechanic (CSM) approach named two-way Fluid-Structure Interaction (FSI) is used to investigate the modal characteristics of a typical rod's vibration. Performance of an Unsteady Reynolds-Average Navier-Stokes (URANS) and Large Eddy Simulation (LES) turbulence models on asymmetric fluctuations of the flow field are investigated. Using the LES turbulence model, any large deformation damps into a weak oscillation which remains in the system. However, it is challenging to use LES in two-way FSI problems from fluid domain discretization point of view which is investigated in this article as the innovation. It is concluded that the near-wall meshes whiten the viscous sub-layer is of great importance to estimate the Root Mean Square (RMS) of FIV amplitude correctly as a significant fretting wear parameter otherwise it merely computes the frequency of FIV.

A Study of Fiber-Reinforced Material Models for the Mechanical Characteristics of Human Annulus Fibrosus (인체의 윤상인대의 역학적 특성 모사를 위한 섬유 강화 모델에 관한 연구)

  • Lim, Jun-Taek;Choi, Deok-Kee
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.35 no.6
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    • pp.619-628
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    • 2011
  • Human soft tissues, including muscles, ligaments, skin, and blood vessels, are an interesting subject because damage to them can be observed in everyday life. Besides the lack of available experimental data and the large deformation upon loading, the anisotropic and compressible nature of annulus fibrosus makes it more difficult to find a simple material model. A fiber-reinforced hyperelastic material model is used to determine the stress-strain curves upon uniaxial loading. The energy potential function for annulus fibrosus is composed of three different parts: matrix, fibers, and matrix-fiber interaction, which accounts for the angles between two families of fibers. In this paper, two different types of energy potential function for the matrix are considered, and are inserted into the fiber-reinforced model. The calculated results are compared with the Neo-Hookean model and experimental data, and reasonable agreement is observed overall.