Difference between revisions of "Isotropic, Hyperelastic-Plastic Mie-Grüneisen Material"

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== Constitutive Law ==
== Constitutive Law ==


This [[Material Models|MPM material]] is identical to an [[Isotropic, Hyperelastic-Plastic Material|HEIsotropic material]] except that it uses a [[Isotropic, Elastic-Plastic Mie-Grüneisen Material#Mie-Grüneisen Equation of State|Mie-Grüneisen equation of state]] in the elastic regime. The elastic shear stress is handled using the Neohookean shear terms in the [[Isotropic, Hyperelastic-Plastic Material|HEIsotropic material]]. A small-strain version of this material is also available in a [[Isotropic, Elastic-Plastic Mie-Grüneisen Material|MGEOSMaterial material]]; this hyperelastic version is usually the preferable choice for accurate simulations.
This [[Material Models|MPM material]] is identical to an [[Isotropic, Hyperelastic-Plastic Material|HEIsotropic material]] except that it uses a Mie-Grüneisen Equation of State|Mie-Grüneisen equation of state in the elastic regime. The elastic-plastic shear response is handled using the shear terms in the [[Isotropic, Hyperelastic-Plastic Material|HEIsotropic material]]. A small-strain version of this material is also available in a [[Isotropic, Elastic-Plastic Mie-Grüneisen Material|MGEOSMaterial material]]; this hyperelastic version is usually the preferable choice for accurate simulations.


=== Mie-Grüneisen Equation of State ===
=== Mie-Grüneisen Equation of State ===

Revision as of 14:53, 19 March 2014

Constitutive Law

This MPM material is identical to an HEIsotropic material except that it uses a Mie-Grüneisen Equation of State|Mie-Grüneisen equation of state in the elastic regime. The elastic-plastic shear response is handled using the shear terms in the HEIsotropic material. A small-strain version of this material is also available in a MGEOSMaterial material; this hyperelastic version is usually the preferable choice for accurate simulations.

Mie-Grüneisen Equation of State

The Mie-Grüneisen equation of state defines the pressure only and the Kirchoff pressure is

      [math]\displaystyle{ {p\over \rho_0} = {C_0^2 \eta \left(1 - {1\over 2}\gamma_0 \eta\right) \over (1 - S_1\eta - S_2\eta^2 - S_3 \eta^3)^2} + \gamma_0 U }[/math]

where [math]\displaystyle{ \eta }[/math] is fraction compression and given by

      [math]\displaystyle{ \eta = 1 - {\rho_0\over \rho} = 1 - {V\over V_0} = 1 - J }[/math]

and [math]\displaystyle{ \gamma_0 }[/math], [math]\displaystyle{ C_0 }[/math], and [math]\displaystyle{ S_i }[/math] are material properties and [math]\displaystyle{ U }[/math] is total internal energy. The [math]\displaystyle{ C_0 }[/math] property is the bulk wave speed under low-pressure conditions. It is related to the low pressure bulk modulus by:

      [math]\displaystyle{ K_0 = \rho_0 C_0^2 }[/math]

The above pressure equation is used only in compression ([math]\displaystyle{ \eta\gt 0 }[/math]). In tension, the pressure is given by

      [math]\displaystyle{ P = C_0^2\eta + \gamma_0 U }[/math]

This equation of state also causes a temperature change of

      [math]\displaystyle{ dT = -JT \gamma_0 {V(t+\Delta t)-V(t)\over V} + {dq \over C_V} }[/math]

where dq is dissipated energy, such as plastic energy, that is converted to heat. By including temperature rises and internal energy, this material automatically thermally expands with the appropriate thermal expansion coefficient without needing to enter a thermal expansion coefficient. The linear thermal expansion coefficient that results is

      [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha = {\rho_0\gamma_0 C_v\over 3K_0} = {\gamma_0 C_v\over 3C_0^2} }[/math]

Note that thermal expansion depends on Cv, which means you must always enter a valid heat capacity for this material, otherwise the thermal expansion will be wrong.

For more details on the Mie-Grüneisen equation of state, you can refer to Wilkens (1999)[1]. The pressure equation here is different than Wilkens, but is equivalent if compared as polynomial expansions; this form is more general because it includes S2 and S3 parameters while Wilkens only has S = S1). The Wilkens reference also has a table of experimentally determined Mie-Grüneisen properties for numerous materials (although these properties have only S1 = S for the denominator).

The shear stress is related to deviatoric strain by the material's shear modulus. The shear modulus is a constant (unless it is changed by a hardening law).

Material Properties

The Mie-Grüneisen equation of state properties and the hardening law properties are set with the following options:

Property Description Units Default
C0 The bulk wave speed m/sec 4004
gamma0 The γ0 parameter none 1.64
S0 The S0 parameter none 1.35
S1 The S1 parameter none 0
S2 The S2 parameter none 0
G Low-strain shear modulus MPa none
Hardening This command selects the hardening law by its name or number. It should be before entering any yielding properties. none none
(yield) Enter all plasticity properties required by the selected hardening law. varies varies
(other) Properties common to all materials varies varies

History Variables

The selected hardening law will create one or more history variables. This material uses the next history variable (after the hardening laws history variables) to store the volumetric change (i.e., J or the determinant of the deformation gradient). The total strain is stored in the elastic strain variable, while the plastic strain stores the left Cauchy Green tensor.

Examples

Material "copper","Copper","HEMGEOSMaterial"
  C0 3933
  S1 1.5
  gamma0 1.99
  rho 8.93
  G 48000
  Cv 134
  kCond 401
  hardening "JohnsonCook"
  Ajc 90
  Bjc 292
  njc .31
  Cjc 0.025
  ep0jc 1
  Tmjc 1356
  mjc 1.09
Done

Material "pmma","PMMA","HEMGEOSMaterial"
  C0 2300
  S1 1.82
  gamma0 1.82
  rho 1.18
  G 1075
  Cv 1466
  kCond 0.2
  hardening "Linear"
  yield 40
  Ep 1500
Done
  1. M. L. Wilkens, Computer Simulation of Dynamic Phenomena, Springer-Verlag, New York (1999).