A micromechanics-based modification of the Gurson criterion by using Eshelby-like velocity fields
DOI10.1016/j.euromechsol.2011.05.008zbMath1278.74024OpenAlexW2072711493MaRDI QIDQ388371
Eric Charkaluk, Djimédo Kondo, Vincent Monchiet
Publication date: 19 December 2013
Published in: European Journal of Mechanics. A. Solids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://hal-upec-upem.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00687856/file/Monchiet-Charkaluk-Kondo-EJM2011.pdf
limit analysismicromechanicsductile porous materialsEshelby-like trial velocity fieldsGurson type modelspherical cavities
Fluid-solid interactions (including aero- and hydro-elasticity, porosity, etc.) (74F10) Micromechanical theories (74A60) Plastic materials, materials of stress-rate and internal-variable type (74C99)
Related Items
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The effective mechanical properties of nonlinear isotropic composites
- A homogenization-based constitutive model for isotropic viscoplastic porous media
- Macroscopic yield criteria for plastic anisotropic materials containing spheroidal voids
- On bounds for the overall potential of power law materials containing voids with an arbitrary shape
- The constitutive law of nonlinear viscous and porous materials
- Approximate models for ductile metals containing non-spherical voids -- case of axisymmetric prolate ellipsoidal cavities
- Constitutive models for porous materials with evolving microstructure
- A micromechanical approach to damage in viscoplastic materials by evolution in size, shape and distribution of voids
- Hollow sphere models, conic programming and third stress invariant
- An improvement of Gurson-type models of porous materials by using Eshelby-like trial velocity fields
- Limit analysis and Gurson's model
- The determination of the elastic field of an ellipsoidal inclusion, and related problems
- The elastic field outside an ellipsoidal inclusion
- An extended model for void growth and coalescence
This page was built for publication: A micromechanics-based modification of the Gurson criterion by using Eshelby-like velocity fields