Abstract

This work presents a procedure to transform an isotropic nonlinear and rate-dependent material model into orthotropic. This transformation relies on a fast computation modifying the material inelastic evolution along any desired direction. With this concept, the constitutive law of the pure isotropic, nonlinear and rate-dependent material is fully preserved. This paper shows a direct application to describe the nonlinear response of unidirectional (UD) or bidirectional (BD) fiber-reinforced polymer composites. Imposing one constraint leads to a UD composite, whilst imposing two orthogonal directions leads to a BD composite. The proposed methodology is implemented as user-defined material for Finite Element solvers. To prove the method, two different visco-plastic material models used to describe isotropic polymer resins are anisotropized to obtain their corresponding composite counterparts. The mechanical response of the simulations are compared qualitatively and quantitatively to experimental tests on a UD coupon under off-axis tensile test under different load directions. Consistency between the UD and BD anisotropization formulations is proved under tension, shear and different loading directions. Additionally, a complete study of computational performance is addressed to assess the anisotropization’s feasibility to be applied in modeling and design of new laminated and multilayer-based structures exhibiting nonlinear material response.

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