4.5 Article

A combined viscoelasticity-viscoplasticity-anisotropic damage model with evolving internal state variables applied to fiber reinforced polymer composites

Journal

MECHANICS OF ADVANCED MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 28, Issue 17, Pages 1775-1796

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15376494.2019.1709673

Keywords

Fiber reinforced polymer; internal state variable; anisotropic damage; viscoelasticity; viscoplasticity

Funding

  1. Mississippi NASA EPSCoR through its Research Infrastructure Development (RID) Program

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The integrated material model combines thermodynamics, mechanics, and creep theory to describe the nonlinear, rate-dependent behavior of Fiber Reinforced Polymer (FRP) composites, including viscoelasticity, viscoplasticity, and damage. Evolving internal state variables are used to capture the hardening and softening behaviors of the material, with a tensor used to model the microscale damage phenomena of the composite.
A thermodynamically-consistent large strain viscoelasticity-viscoplasticity-damage Internal State Variable (ISV) constitutive material model integrated with a mixture theory combining each individual constituent is formulated to describe the highly nonlinear, rate-dependent thermomechanical behavior of Fiber Reinforced Polymer (FRP) composites. The model is formulated in an intermediate configuration where unloading the specimen is viscoelastic. In our model, a rate-dependent yield surface is employed to identify initial yielding of the material. At small deformations, which occurs before yielding, the viscoelastic behavior of FRPs is described using the generalized Maxwell model, while at large deformation, three physically based evolving ISVs are used to capture the hardening and softening behaviors caused by their polymeric constituents. The complicated damage state of the FRPs is captured by a second rank tensor, which is further decomposed to model the subscale damage phenomena of microvoids/cracks nucleation, growth and coalescence. Finally, the mixture theory in combination with certain homogenization procedures are adopted to formulate the overall stress, strain, and damage of the composite in terms of the individual constituents. To demonstrate the model's usage, two examples are presented. First, the ISV model is calibrated to a Polyamide 6,6 reinforced with glass fibers with the aim of showing its capacity to predict the viscoelastic and damage coupled behaviors of a composite. Second, a glass fiber reinforced epoxy with the purpose of describing the temperature dependence and the interphase effect is illustrated.

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