Isotropic Material Failure Surface

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Introduction

This damage initiation law predicts that failure initiates when maximum principal stress exceeds tensile strength of the material or when maximum shear stress exceeds shear strength of the material. It can also model pressure-dependent initiation stresses. Because it deals with principal stresses and tensile failure is the same regardless of direction, this law is only appropriate for isotropic materials such as an IsoSoftening material.

Failure Surface

FailureSurfacePlots.png

Three possible failure stress failure surfaces are shown in the figure. The surface along each axis gives the current strength by that stress. The current strength may depended on external variables such as pressure, strain rate in more. During damage evolution, the current strength will also depend on current damage state. Which failure surface to use for initiation and subseqent damage evolution is determined by the tractionFailureSurface property of the parent isotropic softening material. The calculations for current strength transpose these surfaces to principle stress space and find critical stress by Mohr's circle calculations. The details are given in Ref. [1].

Pressure Dependent Shear Strength

Although generalized damage mechanics[1] provides a method to allow the failure surface to depend on any external variable, the only external dependence currently modeled is to allow shear strength to depend on pressure.

Model 0: shear strength is independent of pressure

Model 1: shear strength is linear in pressure:

     [math]\displaystyle{ \tau = \tau_c\left(1 + {P\over \tau_h}\right) }[/math]

where [math]\displaystyle{ \tau_h }[/math] is hydrostatic tension that causess shear strength to reach zero under hydrostatic tension when [math]\displaystyle{ P=-\tau_h }[/math]. Note with out pressure dependence, a material never failures by shear strength in hydrostatic stress states. Furthermore, [math]\displaystyle{ \tau_h }[/math] must be higher the normal strength [math]\displaystyle{ \sigma_c }[/math].

Model 2: shear strength is step linear. The shear strength below [math]\displaystyle{ P_1 }[/math] is equal to basic shear strength, [math]\displaystyle{ \tau_c }[/math], but for [math]\displaystyle{ P\gt P_1 }[/math], it increases linearly to [math]\displaystyle{ \tau_{max} }[/math] at [math]\displaystyle{ P_2 }[/math]. Above [math]\displaystyle{ P_2 }[/math], the shear strength is constant and equal to [math]\displaystyle{ \tau_{max} }[/math]. For [math]\displaystyle{ P\gt P_1 }[/math], the shear strength is

     [math]\displaystyle{ \tau = \tau_c + {\tau_{max}-\tau_c \over P_2-P_1}\bigl(\min(P,P_2)-P_1\bigr) }[/math]

Model 3: shear stength is exponential with an asymptote. The shear strength below [math]\displaystyle{ P_1 }[/math] is equal to basic shear strength, [math]\displaystyle{ \tau_c }[/math], but for [math]\displaystyle{ P\gt P_1 }[/math], it increases exponentially and asymptotically to [math]\displaystyle{ \tau_{max} }[/math]. For [math]\displaystyle{ P\gt P_1 }[/math], the shear strength is

     <math>\tau = \tau_c + (\tau_{max}-\tau_c)\left(1-\exp\left(-{\ln 2 (P-P_1)\over P_{1/2}}\right)\right)$$

The parameters to enter are new $$\tau_{max}$$ entered using `tauh`, `P1` (default 0), and $$P_{1/2}$$ is entered using `P2` and must be greater than 0. Note that $$P_{1/2}$$ is the pressure increment above P1 required for the shear strength to be half way between `tau` and $$\tau_{max}$$.

Damage Law Properties

The following table lists the input properties for maximum principal stress failure surface:

Property Description Units Default
sigmac Critical tensile stress for failure pressure units infinite
tauc Critical shear stress for failure pressure units infinite
PressureModel Pick a model (0 to 4) to model pressure dependent shear strength none 0
tauh Hydrostatic tension that causes shear strength to drop to zero for pressure model 1 or maximum shear strength for pressure model 1 pressure units infinite
P1
P2
Break points for shear strength in pressure model 2 pressure units 0 for P1

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 J. A. Nairn, "Generalization of Anisotropic Damage Mechanics Modeling in the Material Point Method," Int. J. for Numerical Methods in Engineering, in press (2022).