Well-posedness of a one-dimensional nonlinear kinematic hardening model
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2206316
DOI10.3934/dcdss.2020188zbMath1444.74010OpenAlexW2989743891WikidataQ126758053 ScholiaQ126758053MaRDI QIDQ2206316
Ulisse Stefanelli, David Melching
Publication date: 22 October 2020
Published in: Discrete and Continuous Dynamical Systems. Series S (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.3934/dcdss.2020188
Variational inequalities (49J40) Small-strain, rate-independent theories of plasticity (including rigid-plastic and elasto-plastic materials) (74C05) Topological methods for optimization problems in solid mechanics (74P15)
Related Items (2)
Linearization for finite plasticity under dislocation-density tensor regularization ⋮ A note about hardening-free viscoelastic models in Maxwellian-type rheologies at large strains
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Quasistatic crack growth in finite elasticity with non-interpenetration
- Existence theorems for plasticity problems
- On finite element methods for plasticity problems
- On plasticity with hardening
- Computational inelasticity
- Plasticity. Mathematical theory and numerical analysis
- Maximum norm well-posedness of nonlinear kinmatic hardening models
- Mathematical analysis of the Armstrong-Frederick model from the theory of inelastic deformations of metals. First results and open problems
- Existence results for energetic models for rate-independent systems
- Quasistatic crack growth in nonlinear elasticity
- Hysteresis and phase transitions
- On nonlinear kinematic hardening
- Single-slip elastoplastic microstructures
- Quasi-Static Evolution for the Armstrong-Frederick Hardening-Plasticity Model
- Existence, numerical convergence and evolutionary relaxation for a rate-independent phase-transformation model
- The theory of plasticity which takes into account residual microstresses
- Wellposedness of kinematic hardening models in elastoplasticity
- A Mixed Finite Element Method for Plasticity Problems with Hardening
- Strain gradient visco-plasticity with dislocation densities contributing to the energy
- Existence for dislocation-free finite plasticity
- Lower semicontinuity and existence of minimizers in incremental finite‐strain elastoplasticity
- Recent Developments in the Mathematical Theory of Plasticity
This page was built for publication: Well-posedness of a one-dimensional nonlinear kinematic hardening model