A micromechanical damage model for effective elastoplastic behavior of partially debonded ductile matrix composites
From MaRDI portal
Publication:5945368
DOI10.1016/S0020-7683(01)00124-XzbMath1090.74669MaRDI QIDQ5945368
No author found.
Publication date: 2001
Published in: International Journal of Solids and Structures (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/s0020-7683(01)00124-x
progressive damage; Ensemble-volume averaging method; Metal matrix composites; Random particle distribution
74R20: Anelastic fracture and damage
74Q15: Effective constitutive equations in solid mechanics
74E30: Composite and mixture properties
74A60: Micromechanical theories
74A45: Theories of fracture and damage
Related Items
Effective transverse elastic moduli of three-phase hybrid fiber-reinforced composites with randomly located and interacting aligned circular fibers of distinct elastic properties and sizes, An elastoplastic damage model for metal matrix composites considering progressive imperfect interface under transverse loading, Micromechanics-based elastic-damage analysis of laminated composite structures, Elastoplastic modeling of circular fiber-reinforced ductile matrix composites considering a finite RVE, An elastoplastic multi-level damage model for ductile matrix composites considering evolutionary weakened interface, Effect of crack position on stress intensity factor in particle-reinforced metal-matrix composites, Effective elastic moduli of three-phase composites with randomly located and interacting spherical particles of distinct properties, Concrete under complex loading: Mesomechanical model of deformation and of cumulative damage., System reliability analysis of spatial variance frames based on random field and stochastic elastic modulus reduction method, Micromechanics-based viscoelastic damage model for particle-reinforced polymeric composites, New higher-order bounds on effective transverse elastic moduli of three-phase fiber-reinforced composites with randomly located and interacting aligned circular fibers