4.5 Article

An interphase approach of size effects in ductile porous materials

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FRACTURE
Volume 230, Issue 1-2, Pages 71-82

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10704-020-00507-6

Keywords

Nanoporous materials; Void size effect; Strain gradient plasticity; Ductile materials

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The paper aims to develop a size-dependent Gurson type model by considering different mechanisms responsible for size effects at various scales. The model describes hardening heterogeneity by introducing strain gradient effects and shows good agreement with numerical data in predicting stress triaxiality.
The aim of this paper is to develop a size-dependent Gurson type model. The approach is based on a micromechanical implementation of a local isotropic hardening able to account for different mechanisms responsible for size effects arising at the nanoscale (surface stress effects) and at the micronscale (strain gradient effects). The heterogeneity of hardening is accounted for by considering a finite number of spherical layers (Leblond et al. in Eur J Mech A 14:499-527, 1995; Morin et al. in Int J Solids Struct 118:167-178, 2017) in which hardening is described by a Taylor dislocation model. This introduces some strain gradient effect inducing a void size dependence. In the limit of a thin interphase, the model is shown to be very close to the imperfect coherent interface based model of Dormieux and Kondo (Int J Eng Sci 48:575-581, 2010) for nanoporous materials. In the case of micronscale voids, the model is assessed through comparison of its predictions with finite element cell calculations for different stress triaxiality. A good agreement is observed between the model predictions and numerical data from cell calculations performed by Niordson (Eur J Mech A 27:222-233, 2008).

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