Nagi Elabbasi
Facebook Reality Labs
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2013年3月19日 GMT-4 09:54
Hi Staffan,
It’s not that easy. You cannot for example just use different Hill plasticity constants in tension and compression. That would lead to a discontinuous yield surface and convergence problems. One way to get different yield stresses in tension and compression is to make the yield surface a function of the mean stress or pressure. You will see that for example in the Mohr-Coulumb and Drucker-Prager soil material models (available in the COMSOL Geomechanics Module). These models are not anisotropic though like the Hill plasticity.
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering
Hi Staffan,
It’s not that easy. You cannot for example just use different Hill plasticity constants in tension and compression. That would lead to a discontinuous yield surface and convergence problems. One way to get different yield stresses in tension and compression is to make the yield surface a function of the mean stress or pressure. You will see that for example in the Mohr-Coulumb and Drucker-Prager soil material models (available in the COMSOL Geomechanics Module). These models are not anisotropic though like the Hill plasticity.
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering
Please login with a confirmed email address before reporting spam
Posted:
1 decade ago
2013年3月19日 GMT-4 10:08
Thanks Nagi,
If I understand you right; the yield stresses should be defined as variables in global definitions as functions of current stress state?
What with the actual plasticity stage, do you know if hardening parameters can be given as vector or is one parameter/perfect plasticity the only option?
Still in hope :)
Thanks Nagi,
If I understand you right; the yield stresses should be defined as variables in global definitions as functions of current stress state?
What with the actual plasticity stage, do you know if hardening parameters can be given as vector or is one parameter/perfect plasticity the only option?
Still in hope :)
Nagi Elabbasi
Facebook Reality Labs
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Posted:
1 decade ago
2013年3月19日 GMT-4 11:24
You're welcome.
Yes, the yield function can be a user-defined function of the stress state, and so can the flow rule. The hardening affects the yield stress (part of the yield function) by making it also a function of a scalar measure of plastic strain (or a vector in your case). I believe that can be done too in COMSOL.
My advice when it comes to making significant changes to plasticity though is to select a well-established material model from the literature to implement since there are many subtle issues involved.
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering
You're welcome.
Yes, the yield function can be a user-defined function of the stress state, and so can the flow rule. The hardening affects the yield stress (part of the yield function) by making it also a function of a scalar measure of plastic strain (or a vector in your case). I believe that can be done too in COMSOL.
My advice when it comes to making significant changes to plasticity though is to select a well-established material model from the literature to implement since there are many subtle issues involved.
Nagi Elabbasi
Veryst Engineering