Abstract
A non-local variational model for the evolution of plastic deformation and fracture in tensile bars is proposed. The model is based on an energy functional, sum of an elastic bulk energy, a non-convex dissipative inelastic energy, and a quadratic non-local gradient term, as in (Del Piero et al. in J. Mech. Mater. Struct. 8(2–4):109–151, 2013). The non-local energy is enriched, by assuming a dependence on both the inelastic deformation and its gradient, in order to improve the description of fracture, and bars with varying cross-section are considered, to accurately reproduce the geometry of samples which are commonly used in tensile tests. The evolution of the deformation is described by a two-field incremental minimization problem, where the longitudinal displacement and the plastic part of the deformation are assumed as independent variables. The problem is discretized by finite elements, and the resulting sequence of constrained quadratic programming problems is solved numerically. Different simulations are proposed, reproducing the results of experiments on smooth and notched bone-shaped steel samples. The numerical tests provide accurate response curves, and they capture the distinct phases of the evolution observed in experiments: from the initial yielding phase, in which inelastic deformations form, and propagate as slow plastic waves, to the final rupture, which constitutes the ending stage of a strain-localization process.
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