Abstract

This paper presents a rate-independent elastoplastic constitutive model for (nearly) incompressible biological fiber-reinforced composite materials. The constitutive framework, based on multisurface plasticity, is suitable for describing the mechanical behavior of biological fiber-reinforced composites in finite elastic and plastic strain domains. A key point of the constitutive model is the use of slip systems, which determine the strongly anisotropic elastic and plastic behavior of biological fiber-reinforced composites. The multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient into elastic and plastic parts allows the introduction of an anisotropic Helmholtz free-energy function for determining the anisotropic response. We use the unconditionally stable backward-Euler method to integrate the flow rule and employ the commonly used elastic predictor/plastic corrector concept to update the plastic variables. This choice is expressed as an Eulerian vector update the Newton's type, which leads to a numerically stable and efficient material model. By means of a representative numerical simulations the performance of the proposed constitutive framework is investigated in detail.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call