Abstract

ABSTRACT The crack behaviors under complex stress states are very important for the safety of polymer-bonded explosives (PBXs) under accidental stimulations, but their accurate description is a challenge. Due to the advances of tracking discontinuities and multi-fields coupling, the phase-field model for complex fracture phenomena is attracting significant interest recently. Conventional phase-field fracture models are tension-compression symmetric or based on volumetric-deviatoric strain energy split, and these conventional phase-field models may lead to unrealistic fracture patterns, which hinders its further application in PBX fracture simulations. In this work, we present an extended, tension-compression asymmetric phase-field fracture model for PBXs, which distinguishes the contributions of tensile and compressive stresses to damage driving energy, and couples the mechanism of mechanical degradation and energy-driving cracking diffusion. We implemented our improved phase-field fracture model into finite element calculations and compared the simulation results with the conventional tension-compression symmetric phase-field fracture model and volumetric-deviatoric strain energy split phase-field fracture model by simulating PBX specimens under static loadings. The results show that our model not only accurately depicts the tensile and compressive cracks, but also describes compression-assisted cracking while suppressing unrealistic damage nucleation caused by small amplitudes of local compressive stresses, making it a very efficient way of describing PBX cracking under complex stress states. This new model is both mathematically and physically concise, and convenient for numerical implementation. Moreover, the novel model can be naturally extended to simulate shock-induced dynamic and/or coupled fracture of PBXs because of its feasibilities for dynamic extension and multi-field coupling.

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