Abstract

We study the elasto-plastic behavior of materials made of individual (discrete) objects such as a liquid foam made of bubbles. The evolution of positions and mutual arrangements of individual objects is taken into account through statistical quantities such as the elastic strain of the structure, the yield strain, and the yield function. The past history of the sample plays no explicit role except through its effect on these statistical quantities. They suffice to relate the discrete scale with the collective global scale. At this global scale, the material behaves as a continuous medium; it is described with tensors such as elastic strain, stress, and velocity gradient. We write the differential equations which predict their elastic and plastic behavior in both the general case and the case of simple shear. An overshoot in the shear strain or shear stress is interpreted as a rotation of the deformed structure, which is a purely tensorial effect that exists only if the yield strain is at least of order 0.3. We suggest practical applications including the following: when to choose a scalar formalism rather than a tensorial one; how to relax trapped stresses; and how to model materials with a low, or a high, yield strain.

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