Abstract

The capabilities of existing rate-independent and rate-dependent constitutive models to select the active slip systems at the corners of non-smooth theories play a crucial role in predicting localisation phenomena. Even though the description of crystal plasticity within the context of modern continuum mechanics goes back to the early 1960s, there is no universally accepted solution as to how to identify a unique set of active slip systems. Furthermore, some recently proposed integration schemes have neither been compared with other methods nor tested under complex multiaxial stress conditions thus rendering a direct assessment difficult. In this work, the predictive capabilities of existing crystal plasticity and visco-plasticity formulations and algorithms when subjected to complex multiaxial loading paths are investigated, and their relative accuracies established. In order to compare consistently the performance of different models, a generic thermodynamics-based crystallographic framework, which incorporates current formulations as special cases, is proposed. Several two-dimensional boundary value problems for elasto-plastic and elasto-viscoplastic FCC crystals are selected as benchmark cases. The effects of multiaxial loading paths, latent hardening, and dissipated energy on the selection of active slip systems at sharp yield surface corners are investigated. The differences in the predicted behaviour were found to be associated with both the particular form of the single crystal formulations and the algorithms used in their numerical implementations. Experimental data obtained under multiaxial loading conditions will be required to judge the relative accuracy of each single crystal formulation.

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