Abstract

In this paper, a recently proposed finite strain visco-elastic visco-plastic (three-dimensional) constitutive model is extended to predict the nonlinear response of amorphous polymers from low to high strain rates. The model accounts for the influence of distinct molecular mechanisms, which become active at different deformation rates. Therefore, the constitutive equations include two relaxation phenomena to describe the strain rate sensitivity of amorphous polymers. Well-established rheological elements are adopted to define visco-elasticity (generalized Maxwell elements) and visco-plasticity (Eyring dashpots). In addition, strain hardening is modeled with a plasticity-induced (nonlinear) hardening element which is extended to distinguish between the contribution of the two transitions. From a computational viewpoint, a fully implicit integration algorithm is derived, and a highly efficient implementation is obtained. It is shown that it is possible to reduce the return mapping system of equations to only two independent (scalar) nonlinear equations. A four-stage optimization-based calibration procedure is proposed to identify the model’s material parameters in a completely unsupervised way. The predictive capability of the constitutive model is validated against literature results for polycarbonate and poly(methyl methacrylate), accounting for temperature and strain rate dependencies under different loading conditions. The results show that the model can capture the transition in the yield behavior and predict the post-yield large strain behavior over a wide range of strain rates. The efficiency of the calibration procedure and the overall numerical strategy is also demonstrated. Despite the adiabatic conditions observed under high strain rates, the model replicates the associated effect of temperature through strain rate dependency.

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