Compartmentalized Model for the Mechanical Behavior of Titanium
As close as you watch them, the materials (especially metals) present discontinuities that can easily be qualified as strong. Dislocations, structures formed by these dislocations, phases and grains are all discontinuities, also sources of heterogeneity, with effects on material behavior that are no...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Key engineering materials 2012-01, Vol.504-506, p.673-678 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | As close as you watch them, the materials (especially metals) present discontinuities that can easily be qualified as strong. Dislocations, structures formed by these dislocations, phases and grains are all discontinuities, also sources of heterogeneity, with effects on material behavior that are not really well reproduced by a model based on a continuity assessment. Consequently, the materials should be considered as a set of compartments with different behaviors. This promotes an alternative way to define models. A coherent modeling process is probably the integration of the different behaviors of the material compartments within the global model. The objective is here to build an efficient elasto(visco)plastic model of the mechanical behavior of titanium combining compartmentalized behaviors. After setting the frame of the study, which is of primary importance, the proposed modeling process is running as follows (i) choose a local behavior, (ii) identify the parameters of crystalline texture that must be integrated into the simulation and (iii) finally formulate a way of combining local compartments behaviors. The intrinsic properties of Finite Element codes are used to achieve the integration of the whole system. |
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ISSN: | 1013-9826 1662-9795 1662-9795 |
DOI: | 10.4028/www.scientific.net/KEM.504-506.673 |