Flow plasticity is a solid mechanics theory that is used to describe the plastic behavior of materials. Flow plasticity theories are characterized by the assumption that a flow rule exists that can be used to determine the amount of plastic deformation in the material.
In flow plasticity theories it is assumed that the total strain in a body can be decomposed additively (or multiplicatively) into an elastic part and a plastic part. The elastic part of the strain can be computed from a linear elastic or hyperelastic constitutive model. However, determination of the plastic part of the strain requires a flow rule and a hardening model.
Typical flow plasticity theories for unidirectional loading (for small deformation perfect plasticity or hardening plasticity) are developed on the basis of the following requirements:
\sigma=\sigma0
\sigma=\sigmay
d\sigma>0
d\varepsilonp>0
d\sigma<0
d\varepsilon=d\varepsilone+d\varepsilonp
d\sigmad\varepsilon=d\sigma(d\varepsilone+d\varepsilonp)\ge0
The above requirements can be expressed in three dimensional states of stress and multidirectional loading as follows.
\boldsymbol{\sigma}=D:\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}
where the stiffness matrix
D
f(\boldsymbol{\sigma})=0.
f(\boldsymbol{\sigma},\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}p)=0.
d\boldsymbol{\sigma}: | \partialf |
\partial\boldsymbol{\sigma |
The above equation, when it is equal to zero, indicates a state of neutral loading where the stress state moves along the yield surface.
f<0
d\boldsymbol{\sigma}: | \partialf |
\partial\boldsymbol{\sigma |
d\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}=d\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}e+d\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}p.
d\boldsymbol{\sigma}:d\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}\ge0.
In metal plasticity, the assumption that the plastic strain increment and deviatoric stress tensor have the same principal directions is encapsulated in a relation called the flow rule. Rock plasticity theories also use a similar concept except that the requirement of pressure-dependence of the yield surface requires a relaxation of the above assumption. Instead, it is typically assumed that the plastic strain increment and the normal to the pressure-dependent yield surface have the same direction, i.e.,
d\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}p=dλ
\partialf | |
\partial\boldsymbol{\sigma |
dλ>0
f
The above flow rule is easily justified for perfectly plastic deformations for which
d\boldsymbol{\sigma}=0
d\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}p>0
d\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}e=0
d\boldsymbol{\sigma}: | \partialf |
\partial\boldsymbol{\sigma |
For a work hardening material, the yield surface can expand with increasing stress. We assume Drucker's second stability postulate which states that for an infinitesimal stress cycle this plastic work is positive, i.e.,
d\boldsymbol{\sigma}:d\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}p\ge0.
The Prager consistency condition is needed to close the set of constitutive equations and to eliminate the unknown parameter
dλ
df=0
f(\boldsymbol{\sigma},\boldsymbol{\varepsilon}p)=0
df=
\partialf | |
\partial\boldsymbol{\sigma |
Large deformation flow theories of plasticity typically start with one of the following assumptions:
The first assumption was widely used for numerical simulations of metals but has gradually been superseded by the multiplicative theory.
The concept of multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient into elastic and plastic parts was first proposed independently by B. A. Bilby, E. Kröner, in the context of crystal plasticity and extended to continuum plasticity by Erasmus Lee. The decomposition assumes that the total deformation gradient (F) can be decomposed as:
\boldsymbol{F}=\boldsymbol{F}e ⋅ \boldsymbol{F}p
\begin{align} \boldsymbol{l}&=
\boldsymbol{F |
\boldsymbol{l}=\boldsymbol{l}e+\boldsymbol{F}e ⋅ \boldsymbol{L}p ⋅ (\boldsymbol{F}e)-1.
\boldsymbol{L}p:=
\boldsymbol{F |
\boldsymbol{D}p=\tfrac{1}{2}[\boldsymbol{L}p+(\boldsymbol{L}p)T]~,~~ \boldsymbol{W}p=\tfrac{1}{2}[\boldsymbol{L}p-(\boldsymbol{L}p)T].
The elastic behavior in the finite strain regime is typically described by a hyperelastic material model. The elastic strain can be measured using an elastic right Cauchy-Green deformation tensor defined as:
\boldsymbol{C}e:=(\boldsymbol{F}e)T ⋅ \boldsymbol{F}e.
\boldsymbol{E}e:=\tfrac{1}{2}ln\boldsymbol{C}e.
\boldsymbol{M}:=\tfrac{1}{2}(\boldsymbol{C}e ⋅ \boldsymbol{S}+\boldsymbol{S} ⋅ \boldsymbol{C}e)
\boldsymbol{M}=
\partialW | |
\partial\boldsymbol{E |
e}=J
dU | |
dJ |
+2\mudev(\boldsymbol{E}e)
Application of the Clausius-Duhem inequality leads, in the absence of a plastic spin, to the finite strain flow rule
\boldsymbol{D}p=
λ |
\partialf | |
\partial\boldsymbol{M |
The loading-unloading conditions can be shown to be equivalent to the Karush-Kuhn-Tucker conditions
λ |
\ge0~,~~f\le0~,~~
λ |
f=0.
The consistency condition is identical to that for the small strain case,
λ |
f |
=0.