Abstract

A coupled damage-plastic based constitutive model using a traction-separation law is developed in this study to simulate the behaviour of mortar joints in masonry structural panels subjected to in-plane (2D) and out-of-plane (3D) loading. A smooth hyperbolic failure surface is used to develop the interface material model, which is implemented numerically using a fully implicit backward Euler integration technique is unconditionally stable. To further improve the accuracy and robustness of the interface model, an adaptive sub-stepping scheme and associated consistent tangent operator are formulated considering the effects of damage and plastic deformations. This is beneficial for simulating full-scale masonry structures because the size of load step for some locations with higher deformations can be significantly larger than other locations. The model is first validated using a single cohesive element within a finite-element modelling platform, to assess its behaviour under all possible deformation modes: tensile, compressive with shear and tensile-shear mix-mode behaviour. The cyclic response of a masonry couplet is then simulated to assess model performance in the unloading scenario. Finally, the model is applied to masonry structural walls for simulating their failure response under in-plane and out-of-plane loads, and a good correlation with the experimental results is observed.

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