Hypo– and hyperinelasticity applied to modeling of compacted graphite iron machining simulations
Journal article, 2013

In the present paper we are concerned with constitutive modeling and validation of the thermomechanically coupled Compacted Graphite Iron (CGI) machining problem. Particular emphasis is placed on the significance of the choice of different hypo–inelastic models induced by different objective stress rate formulations. We also relate to a thermodynamically consistent hyperelastic–inelastic formulation based on multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient. The consequently induced tangent material behavior is then derived in the spatial setting in terms of the Oldroyd stress rate, and it is compared to the hypo–formulations. The Johnson–Cook (JC) model is taken as the main prototype for the modeling of isotropic hardening, strain rate and temperature dependencies, which is considered reframed within the Perzyna visco–plasticity framework, thereby highlighting the quasistatic and rate dependent properties of the model. The different models are compared both on the material point level (simple shear and uniaxial tensile–compressive tests) and on the structural level (FE analysis of a 2D shear test and in representative CGI–machining simulations) and the resulting mechanical isothermal behavior obtained from the different ways of establishing the objective stress rate are surprisingly similar. Based on the results obtained a hypo–inelastic formulation based on a modified Oldroyd stress rate is proposed due to its link to thermo–mechanical consistency and relative computational efficiency.

Hyper-inelasticity

Multiplicative decomposition

CGI

Cutting force

Nodularity

Johnson-Cook plasticity

Dissipation

Hypo-inelasticity

Author

Goran Ljustina

Chalmers, Applied Mechanics, Material and Computational Mechanics

Martin Fagerström

Chalmers, Applied Mechanics, Material and Computational Mechanics

Ragnar Larsson

Chalmers, Applied Mechanics, Material and Computational Mechanics

European Journal of Mechanics, A/Solids

0997-7538 (ISSN)

Vol. 37 57-68

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Applied Mechanics

Areas of Advance

Production

Roots

Basic sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.euromechsol.2012.05.002

More information

Latest update

11/13/2019