Yield Surfaces
The kinematic hardening models used to model the behavior of metals subjected to cyclic loading are pressure-independent plasticity models; in other words, yielding of the metals is independent of the equivalent pressure stress. These models are suited for most metals subjected to cyclic loading conditions, except voided metals.
The linear kinematic hardening model can be used with the Mises or Hill yield surface. The nonlinear isotropic/kinematic model can be used only with the Mises yield surface in Abaqus/Standard and with the Mises or Hill yield surface in Abaqus/Explicit. The pressure-independent yield surface used in the linear kinematic hardening model and the nonlinear isotropic/kinematic hardening model is defined by the function
where σ0 is the yield stress and f(σ-α) is the equivalent Mises stress or Hill's potential with respect to the backstress α. For example, the equivalent Mises stress is defined as
where S is the deviatoric stress tensor (defined as S=σ+pI, where σ is the stress tensor, p is the equivalent pressure stress, and I is the identity tensor) and αdev is the deviatoric part of the backstress tensor.
The response in the multilinear kinematic hardening model is assumed to be a weighted sum of various elastic-perfectly plastic elements. Each of these elements, also referred to as subvolumes, uses the Mises yield surface with a different yield strength.