Abstract

AbstractFor many heterogeneous materials such as composites and polycrystals, the material modeling for the constituents on a representative mesoscale can be considered as known, including concrete values of their inherent material parameters. Typical examples are isotropic elastic–plastic models for the constituents of composites or anisotropic crystal–plasticity models for the grains of polycrystals. This knowledge can be exploited with regard to the modeling of the homogenized macroscopic response. In particular, parameters in macroscopic models may be identified by virtual experiments provided by a computational deformation–driving of representative mesostructures. This paper outlines the general concept for the parameter–identification of macroscopic materialmodels based on the virtual testing of given material mesostructures. The virtual test data are obtained in the form of multi–dimensional stress–strain paths by applying different deformation gradients to a given mesostructure. After specifying a corresponding macroscopic material model covering the observed effects on the macroscale, the material parameters are identified by a least–square–type optimization procedure that optimizes the macroscopic material parameters. (© 2004 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)

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