2005
DOI: 10.1007/s00466-005-0685-2
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A variational constitutive model for porous metal plasticity

Abstract: This paper presents a variational formulation of viscoplastic constitutive updates for porous elastoplastic materials. The material model combines von Mises plasticity with volumetric plastic expansion as induced, e.g., by the growth of voids and defects in metals. The finite deformation theory is based on the multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient and an internal variable formulation of continuum thermodynamics. By the use of logarithmic and exponential mappings the stress update algorithms … Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(77 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
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“…and the flow rules (0.13),(0.14) (Yang et al, 2006;Weinberg et al, 2006;Ortiz and Stainier, 1999;Fancello et al, 2006) that the Euler-Lagrange equations corresponding to the minimization problem (0.25) are the equations of motion…”
Section: M) and The Directions Of Plastic And Viscous Flowsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…and the flow rules (0.13),(0.14) (Yang et al, 2006;Weinberg et al, 2006;Ortiz and Stainier, 1999;Fancello et al, 2006) that the Euler-Lagrange equations corresponding to the minimization problem (0.25) are the equations of motion…”
Section: M) and The Directions Of Plastic And Viscous Flowsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A discrete version of problem (0.22) is obtained by introducing the effective incremental strain-energy density (Weinberg et al, 2006)…”
Section: Algorithmmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The aim is to formulate a nucleation model that can be integrated into continuum multiscale descriptions of ductile fracture by void growth and coalescence. Such multiscale models often rely on porous plasticity methods to account for the macroscopic effect of the growing voids, [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] and on micromechanical or localization analyses in order to describe crack growth of the formation of spall planes. 5,[14][15][16][17][18] By design, micromechanical continuum models of porous plasticity either postulate an initial void size and density (e.g., when voids nucleate by decoherence of second-phase particles) or rely on a nucleation model in order to compute the initial void size and density.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%