SANISAND-FN: An evolving fabric-based sand model accounting for stress principal axes rotation
Journal article, 2019

SANISAND is the name of a family of bounding surface plasticity constitutive models for sand within the framework of critical state theory, which have been able to realistically simulate the sand behavior under conventional monotonic and cyclic loading paths. In order to incorporate the important role of evolving fabric anisotropy, one such model was modified within the framework of the new anisotropic critical state theory and named SANISAND-F model. Yet the response under continuous stress principal axes rotation requires further modification to account for the effect of ensuing noncoaxiality on the dilatancy and plastic modulus. This modification is simpler than what is often proposed in the literature, since it does not incorporate an additional plastic loading mechanism and/or multiple dilatancy and plastic modulus expressions. The new model named SANISAND-FN is presented herein and is validated against published data for loading that includes drained stress principal axes rotation on Toyoura sand.

noncoaxiality

anisotropy

constitutive model

fabric

anisotropic critical state theory

bounding surface plasticity

Author

Alexandros Petalas

University of California at Davis

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Geology and Geotechnics

Yannis F. Dafalias

University of California

National Technical University of Athens (NTUA)

Achilleas G. Papadimitriou

National Technical University of Athens (NTUA)

International Journal for Numerical and Analytical Methods in Geomechanics

0363-9061 (ISSN) 10969853 (eISSN)

Vol. 43 1 97-123

Subject Categories

Applied Mechanics

Bioinformatics (Computational Biology)

Control Engineering

DOI

10.1002/nag.2855

More information

Latest update

3/17/2021