• Title/Summary/Keyword: microplane model

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Microplane Model for RC Planar Members in Tension-Compression (인장-압축상태의 철근콘크리트 면 부재를 위한 미소면 모델)

  • 박홍근;김학준
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2000.10a
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    • pp.279-284
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    • 2000
  • The existing microplane models for concrete ust three-dimensional spherical microplanes even in the analyses for two-dimensional members. Also, they can not describe accurately the post-cracking behavior of reinforced concrete in tension-compression. In this study, a new microplane model that is appropriate for the analyses of reinforced concrete planar members was developed to complement these disadvantages of the existing models. The proposed microplane model uses disk microplanes instead of the existing spherical ones. This new model is effective in numerical analysis because it uses less number of microplanes and two-dimensional stresses. Also, in this microplane model a concept of strain boundary was introduced to describe compressive behavior of reinforced concrete in tension-compression.

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Analysis on the Cracking Behavior for Massive Concrete with Age-Dependent Microplane Model (재령효과를 고려한 미소면 모델을 적용한 매스콘크리트의 균열거동 해석)

  • Lee, Yun;Kim, Jin-Keun;Lee, Seong-Tae
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2005.11a
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    • pp.591-594
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    • 2005
  • Concrete structure that has been constructed in real field is on multi-axial stress state condition. After placing of concrete, hydration heat and shrinkage of concrete can cause various stress conditions with respect to the restraint level and condition. So, to predict the early age behavior of concrete structure, multi-axial material model is required and microplane model is acceptable. Recently, many studies have been performed on the microplane model, but the model developed up to now has been related to hardened concrete that material property is constant with concrete age. So, it is inappropriate to apply this model immediately to analyze the early age behavior of concrete. In this study, microplane model that can predict early age behavior of concrete was developed and cracking analysis using that was performed to describe cracking behavior for massive concrete sturucture.

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Meso scale model for fiber-reinforced-concrete: Microplane based approach

  • Smolcic, Zeljko;Ozbolt, Josko
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.375-385
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    • 2017
  • In the present paper experimental and numerical analysis of hook-ended steel fiber reinforced concrete is carried out. The experimental tests are performed on notched beams loaded in 3-point bending using fiber volume fractions up to 1.5%. The numerical analysis of fiber reinforced concrete beams is performed at meso scale. The concrete is discretized with 3D solid finite elements and microplane model is used as a constitutive law. The fibers are modelled by randomly generated 1D truss finite elements, which are connected with concrete matrix by discrete bond-slip relationship. It is demonstrated that the presented approach, which is based on the modelling of concrete matrix using microplane model, able to realistically replicate experimental results. In all investigated cases failure is due to the pull-out of fibers. It is shown that with increase of volume content of fibers the effective bond strength and slip capacity of fibers decreases.

Microplane Model for RC Planar Members in Tension-Compression (인장-압축상태의 철근콘크리트 면 부재를 위한 미소면 모델)

  • 박홍근;김학준
    • Journal of the Korea Concrete Institute
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    • v.13 no.4
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    • pp.379-388
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    • 2001
  • Existing microplane models for concrete use three-dimensional spherical microplanes in the analysis of two-dimensional planar members as well as three-dimensional members. Also, they do not accurately describe the post-cracking behavior of reinforced concrete in tension-compression. In this study, a new microplane model is developed to overcome the disadvantages of the existing models. Instead of the spherical microplanes, the proposed microplane model uses disk microplanes involving a less number of microplanes and two-dimensional stresses and strains. As the result, the proposed model is more effective in numerical calculations. Also, the concept of the strain boundary is introduced to describe accurately the compressive behavior of reinforced concrete with tensile cracks in tension-compression. The validity of the proposed model is verified by comparison with existing experiments. In this paper, the microplane model and the numerical techniques involved in the finite element analysis are described in detail.

The high-rate brittle microplane concrete model: Part I: bounding curves and quasi-static fit to material property data

  • Adley, Mark D.;Frank, Andreas O.;Danielson, Kent T.
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.293-310
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    • 2012
  • This paper discusses a new constitutive model called the high-rate brittle microplane (HRBM) model and also presents the details of a new software package called the Virtual Materials Laboratory (VML). The VML software package was developed to address the challenges of fitting complex material models such as the HRBM model to material property test data and to study the behavior of those models under a wide variety of stress- and strain-paths. VML employs Continuous Evolutionary Algorithms (CEA) in conjunction with gradient search methods to create automatic fitting algorithms to determine constitutive model parameters. The VML code is used to fit the new HRBM model to a well-characterized conventional strength concrete called WES5000. Finally, the ability of the new HRBM model to provide high-fidelity simulations of material property experiments is demonstrated by comparing HRBM simulations to laboratory material property data.

Integration of the microplane constitutive model into the EPIC code

  • Littlefield, David;Walls, Kenneth C.;Danielson, Kent T.
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.145-158
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    • 2010
  • In this work the implementation of a production-level port of the Microplane constitutive model for concrete into the EPIC code is described. The port follows guidelines outlined in the Material Model Module (MMM) standard used in EPIC to insure a seamless interface with the existing code. Certain features of the model were not implemented using the MMM interface due to compatibility reasons; for example, a separate module was developed to initialize, store and update internal state variables. Objective strain and deformation measures for use in the material model were also implemented into the code. Example calculations were performed and illustrate the veracity of this new implementation.

Numerical procedures for extreme impulsive loading on high strength concrete structures

  • Danielson, Kent T.;Adley, Mark D.;O'Daniel, James L.
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.159-167
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    • 2010
  • This paper demonstrates numerical techniques for complex large-scale modeling with microplane constitutive theories for reinforced high strength concrete, which for these applications, is defined to be around the 7000 psi (48 MPa) strength as frequently found in protective structural design. Applications involve highly impulsive loads, such as an explosive detonation or impact-penetration event. These capabilities were implemented into the authors' finite element code, ParaAble and the PRONTO 3D code from Sandia National Laboratories. All materials are explicitly modeled with eight-noded hexahedral elements. The concrete is modeled with a microplane constitutive theory, the reinforcing steel is modeled with the Johnson-Cook model, and the high explosive material is modeled with a JWL equation of state and a programmed burn model. Damage evolution, which can be used for erosion of elements and/or for post-analysis examination of damage, is extracted from the microplane predictions and computed by a modified Holmquist-Johnson-Cook approach that relates damage to levels of inelastic strain increment and pressure. Computation is performed with MPI on parallel processors. Several practical analyses demonstrate that large-scale analyses of this type can be reasonably run on large parallel computing systems.

Early Age Cracking Analysis of Massive Concrete Base Slab with Enhanced Microplane Model (개선된 미소면 모델을 적용한 매스콘크리트 기초슬래브의 초기균열거동 해석)

  • Lee, Yun;Kim, Jin-Keun;Woo, Sang-Kyun;Song, Young-Chul;Yi, Seong-Tae
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2006.05a
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    • pp.458-461
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    • 2006
  • Early age cracking of concrete is a widespread and complicated problem, and diverse applications in practical engineering have focused on this issue. Since massive concrete base slab composes the infrastructure of other concrete structures such as pier, concrete dam, and high rise buildings, early age cracking of that is considered as a crucial problem. In this study, finite element analysis (FEA) implemented with the age-dependent microplane model was performed. For a massive concrete base slab, cracking initiation and propagation, and deformation variation were investigated with concrete age. In massive concrete slab, autogenous shrinkage increases the risk of early age cracking and it reduces reinforcement effect on control of early age cracking. Gradual crack occurrence is experienced from exterior surface towards interior of the slab in case of combined hydration heat and autogenous shrinkage. FEA implemented with enhanced microplane model successfully simulates the typical cracking patterns due to edge restraint in concrete base slab.

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Microplane Constitutive Model for Granite and Analysis of Its Behavior (마이크로플레인 모델을 이용한 화강암의 3차원 구성방정식 개발 및 암석거동 모사)

  • Zi Goangseup;Moon Sang-Mo;Lee In-Mo
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.41-53
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    • 2006
  • The brittle materials like rocks show complicated strain-softening behavior after the peak which is hard to model using the classical constitutive models based on the relation between strain and stress tensors. A kinematically constrained three-dimensional microplane constitutive model is developed for granite. The model is verified by fitting the experimented data of Westerly granite and Bonnet granite. The triaxial behavior of granite is well reproduced by the model as well as the uniaxial behavior. We studied the development of the fracture zone in granite during blasting impact using the model with the standard finite element method. All the results obtained from the microplane model developed are compared to those from the linear elasticity model which is commonly used in many researches and practices. It is found that the nonlinearity of rocks sigificantly affects the results of analysis.

Some aspects of load-rate sensitivity in visco-elastic microplane material model

  • Kozar, Ivica;Ozbolt, Josko
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.7 no.4
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    • pp.317-329
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    • 2010
  • The paper describes localization of deformation in a bar under tensile loading. The material of the bar is considered as non-linear viscous elastic and the bar consists of two symmetric halves. It is assumed that the model represents behavior of the quasi-brittle viscous material under uniaxial tension with different loading rates. Besides that, the bar could represent uniaxial stress-strain law on a single plane of a microplane material model. Non-linear material property is taken from the microplane material model and it is coupled with the viscous damper producing non-linear Maxwell material model. Mathematically, the problem is described with a system of two partial differential equations with a non-linear algebraic constraint. In order to obtain solution, the system of differential algebraic equations is transformed into a system of three partial differential equations. System is subjected to loadings of different rate and it is shown that localization occurs only for high loading rates. Mathematically, in such a case two solutions are possible: one without the localization (unstable) and one with the localization (stable one). Furthermore, mass is added to the bar and in that case the problem is described with a system of four differential equations. It is demonstrated that for high enough loading rates, it is the added mass that dominates the response, in contrast to the viscous and elastic material parameters that dominated in the case without mass. This is demonstrated by several numerical examples.