Abstract

Many materials demonstrate a dependence of mechanical properties on the type of stressed or deformed states. This is most noticeable in the dependence of the processes of shear and bulk deformation. Such materials include rocks, structural graphite, concrete, some grades of steel, cast iron, and aluminum. The main properties of these materials are an absence of a "single curve" relationship between the intensity of stresses and the intensity of deformations. Under shear conditions, bulk deformations can occur. Such materials can be described by constitutive equations that depend on the parameter of the type of a stress state, which is the ratio of the first invariant of the stress tensor to the stress intensity. Thus, these defining relations give the dependence of the strain tensor components on the stress tensor components. Such defining relations can be quite cumbersome, and therefore do not allow an analytical treatment to obtain defining relations that give the dependence of the components of the stress tensor on the components of the strain tensor. The paper proposes the constitutive relations obtained from the analysis of test results of various materials, which properties depend on the type of deformed state. Conditions are derived for material constants that ensure the uniqueness of the solution of boundary value problems. Based on experimental data obtained under the conditions of the proportional loading of various rocks: limestone and talcochlorite, as well as the results of mechanical tests of several grades of concrete, the constants of the mathematical model are determined. The results of the experimental studies are compared with theoretical dependencies predicted by the model. The limited applicability of the proposed constitutive relations is established.

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