Abstract

A stress-gradient material model was recently proposed by Forest and Sab (Mech. Res. Comm.40, 16–25, 2012) as an alternative to the well-known strain-gradient model introduced in the mid 60s. We propose a theoretical framework for the homogenization of stress-gradient materials. We derive suitable boundary conditions ensuring that Hill–Mandel’s lemma holds. As a first result, we show that stress-gradient materials exhibit a softening size-effect (to be defined more precisely in this paper), while strain-gradient materials exhibit a stiffening size-effect. This demonstrates that the stress-gradient and strain-gradient models are not equivalent as intuition would have it, but rather complementary. Using the solution to Eshelby’s spherical inhomogeneity problem that we derive in this paper, we propose Mori–Tanaka estimates of the effective properties of stress-gradient composites with spherical inclusions, thus opening the way to more advanced multi-scale analyses of stress-gradient materials.

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