Critical Void Volume Fraction Identification Based on Mesoscopic Damage Model for NVA Shipbuilding Steel
Journal article, 2019

NVA mild steel is a commonly used material in the shipbuilding industry. An accurate model for description of this material's ductile fracture behaviour in numerical simulation is still a challenging task. In this paper, a new method for predicting the critical void volume fraction f(c) in the Guson-Tvergaard-Needleman (GTN) model is introduced to describe the ductile fracture behaviour of NVA shipbuilding mild steel during ship collision and grounding scenarios. Most of the previous methods for determination of the parameter f(c) use a converse method, which determines the values of the parameters through comparisons between experimental results and numerical simulation results but with high uncertainty. A new method is proposed based on the Hill, Bressan, and Williams hypothesis, which reduces the uncertainty to a satisfying extent. To accurately describe the stress-strain relationship of materials before and after necking, a combination of the Voce and Swift models is used to describe the material properties of NVA mild steel. A user-defined material subroutine has been developed to enable the application of the new parameter determination method and its implementation in the finite element software LS-DYNA. It is observed that the model can accurately describe structural damage by comparing the numerical simulation results with those of experiments; thus, the results demonstrate the model's capacity for structural response prediction in ship collision and grounding scenario simulations

Ship collision and grounding

Ductile fracture

NVA steel

Guson-Tvergaard-Needleman model

Finite element method

Author

Zijie Song

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

Zhiqiang Hu

Newcastle University

Jonas Ringsberg

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Marine Technology

Journal of Marine Science and Application

1671-9433 (ISSN) 1993-5048 (eISSN)

Vol. 18 4 444-454

Subject Categories

Materials Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1007/s11804-019-00117-2

More information

Latest update

10/9/2022