is needed to define a material's yield behavior accurately when the
yield strength depends on the rate of straining and the anticipated strain
rates are significant;
is available only for the isotropic hardening metal plasticity models
(Mises, Johnson-Cook, and Hill), the isotropic component of the nonlinear
isotropic/kinematic plasticity models, the extended Drucker-Prager plasticity
model, and the crushable foam plasticity model;
can be conveniently defined on the basis of work hardening parameters
and field variables by providing tabular data for the isotropic hardening metal
plasticity models, the isotropic component of the nonlinear isotropic/kinematic
plasticity models, and the extended Drucker-Prager plasticity model;
can be defined through specification of user-defined overstress power
law parameters, yield stress ratios, or Johnson-Cook rate dependence parameters
(this last option is not available for the crushable foam plasticity model and
is the only option available for the Johnson-Cook plasticity model);
cannot be used with any of the
Abaqus/Standard
creep models (metal creep, time-dependent volumetric swelling, Drucker-Prager
creep, or cap creep) since creep behavior is already a rate-dependent
mechanism; and
in dynamic analysis should be specified such that the yield stress
increases with increasing strain rate.
Generally, a material's yield stress,
(or
for the crushable foam model), is dependent on work hardening, which for
isotropic hardening models is usually represented by a suitable measure of
equivalent plastic strain, ;
the inelastic strain rate, ;
temperature, ;
and predefined field variables, :
Many materials show an increase in their yield strength as strain rates
increase; this effect becomes important in many metals and polymers when the
strain rates range between 0.1 and 1 per second, and it can be very important
for strain rates ranging between 10 and 100 per second, which are
characteristic of high-energy dynamic events or manufacturing processes.
Defining Hardening Dependencies for Various Material Models
Strain rate dependence can be defined by entering hardening curves at
different strain rates directly or by defining yield stress ratios to specify
the rate dependence independently.
Direct Entry of Test Data
Work hardening dependencies can be given quite generally as tabular data for
the isotropic hardening Mises plasticity model, the isotropic component of the
nonlinear isotropic/kinematic hardening model, and the extended Drucker-Prager
plasticity model. The test data are entered as tables of yield stress values
versus equivalent plastic strain at different equivalent plastic strain rates.
The yield stress must be given as a function of the equivalent plastic strain
and, if required, of temperature and of other predefined field variables. In
defining this dependence at finite strains, “true” (Cauchy) stress and log
strain values should be used. The hardening curve at each temperature must
always start at zero plastic strain. For perfect plasticity only one yield
stress, with zero plastic strain, should be defined at each temperature. It is
possible to define the material to be strain softening as well as strain
hardening. The work hardening data are repeated as often as needed to define
stress-strain curves at different strain rates, starting with the static
stress-strain curve and followed by curves corresponding to increasing values
of strain rate. The yield stress at a given strain and strain rate is
interpolated directly from these tables.
Using Yield Stress Ratios
Alternatively, and as the only means of defining rate-dependent yield stress
for the Johnson-Cook and the crushable foam plasticity models, the strain rate
behavior can be assumed to be separable, so that the stress-strain dependence
is similar at all strain rate levels:
where
(or
in the foam model) is the static stress-strain behavior and
is the ratio of the yield stress at nonzero strain rate to the static yield
stress (so that ).
Three methods are offered to define R in
Abaqus:
specifying an overstress power law, defining R directly as
a tabular function, or specifying an analytical Johnson-Cook form to define
R.
Overstress Power Law
The Cowper-Symonds overstress power law has the form
where
and
are material parameters that can be functions of temperature and, possibly, of
other predefined field variables.
Chaboche Rate Dependence
Chaboche rate dependence has the form
where ,
,
and
are material parameters that can be functions of temperature and, possibly, of
other predefined field variables.
The above relation can be rewritten as
If Chaboche rate dependence is used with the crushable foam model,
and must be replaced with and , respectively, in the above relations. In the perfectly
plastic case when
or
does not depend on plastic strain, this law and the overstress power law become
identical if .
However, in general, if hardening is defined these laws produce different
results.
Tabular Function
Alternatively, R can be entered directly as a tabular
function of the equivalent plastic strain rate (or the axial plastic strain
rate in a uniaxial compression test for the crushable foam model),
;
temperature, ;
and field variables, .
Johnson-Cook Rate Dependence
Johnson-Cook rate dependence has the form
where
and C are material constants that do not depend on
temperature and are assumed not to depend on predefined field variables.
Johnson-Cook rate dependence can be used in conjunction with the Johnson-Cook
plasticity model, the isotropic hardening metal plasticity models, and the
extended Drucker-Prager plasticity model (it cannot be used in conjunction with
the crushable foam plasticity model).
This is the only form of rate dependence available for the Johnson-Cook
plasticity model. For more details, see
Johnson-Cook Plasticity.
Elements
Rate-dependent yield can be used with all elements that include mechanical
behavior (elements that have displacement degrees of freedom).