Papers by Keyword: Plastic Potential

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Abstract: This paper presents an experimental investigation on the failure surface and plastic potential in deviatoric plane of Bangkok Clay. The results of torsional shear hollow cylinder and triaxial tests with various principal stress directions and magnitudes of intermediate principal stress on undisturbed Bangkok Clay specimens are presented. The obtained stress-strain behaviors assert clear evidences of anisotropic characteristics of Bangkok Clay. Both failure surface and plastic potential in deviatoric plane of Bangkok Clay are demonstrated as isotropic and of circular shape (Drucker-Prager type) which implies an associated flow rule. Concerning the behavior of Bangkok Clay found from this study, the discussions on the effects of employed constitutive modeling approach on the resulting numerical analysis are made.
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Abstract: In this paper we discuss properties of dense granular °ows and elaborate on some properties of a model which generalises the classical plastic potential model using elements of the double shearing model. It is shown how the model is embedded into a Cosserat continuum model. The proposed model recti¯es the ill-posedness of both the non-associated °ow rule and the double shearing model and may be used for both granular materials and also for metals which possess a micro-structure which is capable of rotation.
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Abstract: A crystal plasticity model has been used to simulate channel die experiments on both, pure magnesium single crystals and polycrystalline textured rolled plates. Deformation mechanisms and slip system activity can be identified by FE-analyses of single crystals. The role of twinning can be understood and modeled phenomenologically by an additional slip system. Simulations of polycrystalline aggregates are used to obtain a representation of the material's phenomenological yield function in order to describe the plastic deformation behavior using the framework of continuum mechanics. This allows for accounting for the specific texture and thus for its optimization. The tension- compression asymmetry, which is typical for mechanically processed magnesium material, can be reproduced by means of the crystal plasticity and a phenomenological model.
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