6533b823fe1ef96bd127df62

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Surface effects, boundary conditions and evolution laws within second strain gradient plasticity

Castrenze Polizzotto

subject

Stress (mechanics)Boundary layerMaterials scienceDeformation (mechanics)Mechanics of MaterialsMechanical EngineeringLawTraction (engineering)Constitutive equationBoundary (topology)General Materials ScienceBoundary value problemPlasticity

description

Abstract The principle of the virtual power (PVP) is used in conjunction with the concepts of “energy residual” and “insulation condition” to address second strain gradient plasticity. The energy residual with its typical divergence format is an extra stress power playing the role of basic state variable to describe the gradient effects, whereas the insulation condition constitutes a global energy characterization of the body as part of the body/environment system. The microstructure of a second strain gradient material (but not of a first strain gradient one) is shown to exhibit surface effects with the formation of a thin boundary layer. This boundary layer is in local (and global) equilibrium according to the principles of the material surface mechanics and supports the boundary microtractions, except a part (Cauchy-like traction) transmitted to the bulk microstructure; it works as a structured two-dimensional manifold replacing the conventional purely geometrical concept of boundary surface. By the insulation condition the higher order boundary conditions are determined (for first and second strain gradient plasticity), including those for the moving elastic/plastic interface. Besides the usual continuity boundary conditions, some extra (at most three) “rest” boundary conditions are required to fix the current location of the interface. The restrictions on the constitutive equations and the evolution laws are also addressed, whereby a mixed modeling scheme is used to model the dissipative stresses. An application to an elastic-softening bar in extension shows the ability of the proposed model to capture and describe the formation of a multi-waved deformation pattern within the localization band.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijplas.2014.03.001