• Title/Summary/Keyword: true stress-true strain

Search Result 94, Processing Time 0.024 seconds

Mechanical response of rockfills in a simulated true triaxial test: A combined FDEM study

  • Ma, Gang;Chang, Xiao-Lin;Zhou, Wei;Ng, Tang-Tat
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
    • /
    • v.7 no.3
    • /
    • pp.317-333
    • /
    • 2014
  • The study of the mechanical behavior of rockfill materials under three-dimensional loading conditions is a current research focus area. This paper presents a microscale numerical study of rockfill deformation and strength characteristics using the Combined Finite-Discrete Element Method (FDEM). Two features unique to this study are the consideration of irregular particle shapes and particle crushability. A polydisperse assembly of irregular polyhedra was prepared to reproduce the mechanical behavior of rockfill materials subjected to axial compression at a constant mean stress for a range of intermediate principal stress ratios in the interval [0, 1]. The simulation results, including the stress-strain characteristics, relationship between principal strains, and principal deviator strains are discussed. The stress-dilatancy behavior is described using a linear dilatancy equation with its material constants varying with the intermediate principal stress ratio. The failure surface in the principal stress space and its traces in the deviatoric and meridian plane are also presented. The modified Lade-Duncan criterion most closely describes the stress points at failure.

An Evaluation of Plastic Flow Characteristic for local structure of Weldment in Power Plant using SP test and Inverse FEA (역해석과 소형펀치 시험에 의한 발전설비 용접부의 소성유동특성 평가)

  • Baek, Seung-Se;Kwon, Il-Hyun;Kim, Hoi-Hyun;Lee, Dong-Hwan;Yang, Sung-Mo;Yu, Hyo-Sun
    • Proceedings of the KSME Conference
    • /
    • 2004.11a
    • /
    • pp.308-313
    • /
    • 2004
  • SP test has been confirmed the availability, however the application of SP test is hampered because the relation of stress-strain and load-displacement is not determined definitely. This study suggested an evaluation technique of plastic flow characteristic for X20CrMoV121 steel weldment through inverse analysis using SP test and finite element analysis(FEA). From the result, good agreement was found in load-displacement curves obtained from SP test and FEA. Also, The behavior of load-displacement curve from FEA show a rule that load is increase with increasing K(strength coefficient) and displacement is increase with increasing n(work hardening index). From the inverse analysis, true stress-strain curve could be obtained for each local structure of weldment. And the CGHAZ and WM, which showed lower load- displacement behavior, have smaller work hardening index, while FGHAZ have the largest index.

  • PDF

High Temperature Compressive Properties of Tungsten Activated Sintered Pare Prepared by 0.4 wt.% Ni-doped Tungsten Powder Compacts (0.4 wt% Ni을 첨가한 W 활성소결체의 고온압축 특성 연구)

  • 이승익;김순욱;박영삼;문인형
    • Journal of Powder Materials
    • /
    • v.9 no.5
    • /
    • pp.307-314
    • /
    • 2002
  • The high temperature deformation behavior of the activated sintered W powder compacts was investigated. The W compact showed the relative density of 94% with the average W grain size of $23\mutextrm{m}$ by activated sintering at $1400^{\circ}C$ for 1 hour. Compression tests were carried out in the temperature range of $900-1100^{\circ}C$ at the strain rate range of $10^{0}$/sec - $10^{-3}$/sec. True stress-strain curve and microstructure exhibited the grain boundary brittleness which was dependent on the compression test temperature. The activated sintered W compact showed that the maximum stress as well as the strain at the maximum stress was abruptly decreased as the test temperature increase from $900^{\circ}C$ to 1000 and $1100^{\circ}C$ regardless of the strain rate. The discrepancy of the microstructure in the specimen center was obviously observed with the increase of the test temperature. After compression test at $900^{\circ}C$ the W grain was severely deformed normally against the compression axis. However, after compression test at $1000^{\circ}C$ and $1100^{\circ}C$ the W grain was not deformed, but the microcrack was formed in the W grain boundary. The Ni-rich second phase segregated along the W grain boundary could be partly unstable over $900^{\circ}C$ and affect the poor mechanical property of the activated sintered W compact.

Compressive Deformation Behaviors of Aluminum Alloy in a SHPB Test (SHPB 시험과 알루미늄 합금의 압축 변형거동)

  • Kim, Jong-Tak;Woo, Sung-Choong;Kim, Jin-Young;Kim, Tae-Won
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
    • /
    • v.36 no.6
    • /
    • pp.617-622
    • /
    • 2012
  • Structures are often subjected to various types of loading such as static, dynamic, or impact loading. Therefore, experimental and numerical methods have been employed to find adequate material properties according to the conditions. The Split-Hopkinson pressure bar (SHPB) test has frequently been used to test engineering materials, particularly those used under high strain rates. In this study, the compressive deformation behaviors of aluminum alloy under impact conditions have been investigated by means of the SHPB test. The experimental results were then compared with those of finite element analyses. It was shown that reasonably good agreement with the true stress-strain curves was obtained at strain rates ranging from 1000 $s^{-1}$ to 2000 $s^{-1}$. When the strain rate increased by 30%, the peak stress in particular increased by 17%, and the strain also increased by 20%.

Numerical investigations on breakage behaviour of granular materials under triaxial stresses

  • Zhou, Lunlun;Chu, Xihua;Zhang, Xue;Xu, Yuanjie
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
    • /
    • v.11 no.5
    • /
    • pp.639-655
    • /
    • 2016
  • The effect of particle breakage and intermediate principal stress ratio on the behaviour of crushable granular assemblies under true triaxial stress conditions is studied using the discrete element method. Numerical results show that the increase of intermediate principal stress ratio $b(b=({\sigma}_2-{\sigma}_3)/({\sigma}_1-{\sigma}_3))$ results in the increase of dilatancy at low confining pressures but the decrease of dilatancy at high confining pressures, which stems from the distinct increasing compaction caused by breakage with b. The influence of b on the evolution of the peak apparent friction angle is also weakened by particle breakage. For low relative breakage, the relationship between the peak apparent friction angle and b is close to the Lade-Duncan failure model, whereas it conforms to the Matsuoka-Nakai failure model for high relative breakage. In addition, the increasing tendency of relative breakage, calculated based on a fractal particle size distribution with the fractal dimension being 2.5, declines with the increasing confining pressure and axial strain, which implies the existence of an ultimate graduation. Finally, the relationship between particle breakage and plastic work is found to conform to a unique hyperbolic correlation regardless of the test conditions.

A Finite Element Nonlinear Formulation for Large Deformations of Plane Frames (평면 뼈대구조물의 큰 변형에 대한 비선형 유한요소의 정식화)

  • 윤영묵;박문호
    • Computational Structural Engineering
    • /
    • v.7 no.4
    • /
    • pp.69-83
    • /
    • 1994
  • An explicit finite element nonlinear formulation for very large deformations of plane frame structures is developed. The formulation is based on an updated material reference frame and hence a true stress-strain relationship can be directly applied to characterize the properties of material which is subjected to very large deformations. In the formulation, a co-rotational approach is applied to deal with the large rotations but small strain problems. Straight beam element is considered when the strain of an element is large. The element formulation is based on the small deflection beam theory but with the inclusion of the effect of axial force. The element equations are constructed in an element local coordinate system which rotates and translates with the element, and then transformed to the global coordinate system. Several numerical examples are analyzed to validate the presented formulation.

  • PDF

Investigation of High Temperature Deformation Behavior in Compression and Torsion of Ti-6Al-4V Alloy (Ti-6Al-4V합금의 비틀림 및 압축변형에 따른 고온변형거동 고찰)

  • Yeom, J.T.;Jung, E.J.;Kim, J.H.;Hong, J.K.;Park, N.K.;Lee, C.S.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Technology of Plasticity Conference
    • /
    • 2008.05a
    • /
    • pp.435-438
    • /
    • 2008
  • High temperature deformation of Ti-6Al-4V alloy with a lamellar colony microstructure was investigated by hot compression and torsion tests. The torsion and compression tests were carried out under a wide range of temperatures and strain rates with true strain up to 2 and 0.7, respectively. The processing maps were generated on the basis of compression and torsion test data and using the principles of dynamic materials modeling (DMM). The shapes of the strain-stress curves in alpha-beta region and processing maps obtained on the two different tests have been compared with a view to evaluate the effect of the microstructure evolution on the flow softening behavior of Ti-6Al-4V alloy with a lamellar colony microstructure.

  • PDF

Plasticity and Fracture Behaviors of Marine Structural Steel, Part I: Theoretical Backgrounds of Strain Hardening and Rate Hardening (조선 해양 구조물용 강재의 소성 및 파단 특성 I: 변형률 경화 및 변형률 속도 경화의 이론적 배경)

  • Choung, Joon-Mo;Shim, Chun-Sik;Kim, Kyung-Su
    • Journal of Ocean Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.25 no.2
    • /
    • pp.134-144
    • /
    • 2011
  • In this paper, the global study trends for material behaviors are investigated regarding the static and dynamic hardenings and final fractures of marine structural steels. In particular, after reviewing all of the papers published at the 4th and 5th ICCGS (International Conference on Collision and Grounding of Ship), the used hardening and fracture properties are summarized, explicitly presenting the material properties. Although some studies have attempted to employ new plasticity and fracture models, it is obvious that most still employed an ideal hardening rule such as perfect plastic or linear hardening and a simple shear fracture criterion with an assumed value of failure strain. HSE (2001) presented pioneering study results regarding the temperature dependency of material strain hardening at various levels of temperature, but did not show strain rate hardening at intermediate or high strain rate ranges. Nemat-Nasser and Guo (2003) carried out fully coupled tests for DH-36 steel: strain hardening, strain rate hardening, and temperature hardening and softening at multiple steps of strain rates and temperatures. The main goal of this paper is to provide the theoretical background for strain and strain rate hardening. In addition, it presents the procedure and methodology needed to derive the material constants for the static hardening constitutive equations of Ludwik, Hollomon, Swift, and Ramberg-Osgood and for the dynamic hardening constitutive equations of power from Cowper-Symonds and Johnson-Cook.

Sensor placement driven by a model order reduction (MOR) reasoning

  • Casciati, Fabio;Faravelli, Lucia
    • Smart Structures and Systems
    • /
    • v.13 no.3
    • /
    • pp.343-352
    • /
    • 2014
  • Given a body undergoing a stress-strain status as consequence of external excitations, sensors can be deployed on the accessible lateral surface of the body. The sensor readings are regarded as input of a numerical model of reduced order (i.e., the number of sensors is lower than the number of the state variables the full model would require). The goal is to locate the sensors in such a way to minimize the deviations from the response of the true (full) model. One adopts either accelerometers as sensors or devices reading relative displacements. Two applications are studied: a plane frame is first investigated; the focus is eventually on a 3D body.

Temperature Effects on Fracture Toughness Parameters for Pipeline Steels

  • Chanda, Sourayon;Ru, C.Q.
    • International journal of steel structures
    • /
    • v.18 no.5
    • /
    • pp.1754-1760
    • /
    • 2018
  • The present article showcases a temperature dependent cohesive zone model (CZM)-based fi nite element simulation of drop weight tear test (DWTT), to analyse fracture behavior of pipeline steel (PS) at different temperatures. By co-relating the key CZM parameters with known mechanical properties of PS at varying temperature, a temperature dependent CZM for PS is proposed. A modified form of Johnson and Cook model has been used for the true stress-strain behavior of PS. The numerical model, using Abaqus/CAE 6.13, has been validated by comparing the predicted results with load-displacement curves obtained from test data. During steady-state crack propagation, toughness parameters (such as CTOA and CTOD) were found to remain fairly constant at a given temperature. These toughness parameters, however, show an exponential increase with increase in temperature. The present paper offers a plausible approach to numerically analyze fracture behavior of PS at varying temperature using a temperature dependent CZM.