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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Toward a damage-based finite element fracture theory and application to ductile metals

Williams, Thomas Neil 07 August 2010 (has links) (PDF)
In this work, the simulation of monotonic fracture in ductile metals was studied and a method of predicting damage-based fracture propagation was introduced. Traditional methodologies for predicting stable crack growth were investigated, and an error analysis was performed to show the suitability of the fracture simulation method chosen for this study. J2 plasticity was investigated for its applicability in predicting crack advance direction for mode-I and mixed-mode simulations. A two parameter crack advance criterion was introduced, and crack propagation simulations were performed to show the suitability of the new fracture criterion that is dependent on damage. J2 plasticity was modified in an attempt to capture the damage mechanisms occurring in front of the crack tip. The end result of this research is a computational tool that is capable of predicting the crack propagation path based on physical and measurable material parameters without knowledge of the crack trajectory a priori while also allowing the constitutive model for the material response to be readily changed. An error analysis was also performed on the existing equations of crack surface displacements for symmetric cracks emanating from a circular hole in an infinite plate subjected to remote stress and stress applied to a segment of the crack surface. New equations were developed for crack surface displacements for symmetric cracks emanating from the circular hole in an infinite plate subjected to a remote stress.
2

A micromechanics based ductile damage model for anisotropic titanium alloys

Keralavarma, Shyam Mohan 15 May 2009 (has links)
The hot-workability of Titanium (Ti) alloys is of current interest to the aerospace industry due to its widespread application in the design of strong and light-weight aircraft structural components and engine parts. Motivated by the need for accurate simulation of large scale plastic deformation in metals that exhibit macroscopic plastic anisotropy, such as Ti, a constitutive model is developed for anisotropic materials undergoing plastic deformation coupled with ductile damage in the form of internal cavitation. The model is developed from a rigorous micromechanical basis, following well-known previous works in the field. The model incorporates the porosity and void aspect ratio as internal damage variables, and seeks to provide a more accurate prediction of damage growth compared to previous existing models. A closed form expression for the macroscopic yield locus is derived using a Hill-Mandel homogenization and limit analysis of a porous representative volume element. Analytical expressions are also developed for the evolution of the internal variables, porosity and void shape. The developed yield criterion is validated by comparison to numerically determined yield loci for specific anisotropic materials, using a numerical limit analysis technique developed herein. The evolution laws for the internal variables are validated by comparison with direct finite element simulations of porous unit cells. Comparison with previously published results in the literature indicates that the new model yields better agreement with the numerically determined yield loci for a wide range of loading paths. Use of the new model in continuum finite element simulations of ductile fracture may be expected to lead to improved predictions for damage evolution and fracture modes in plastically anisotropic materials.

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