Citation:
Vishnu, A. R., Marvi-Mashhadi, M., Nieto-Fuentes, J. C., & Rodríguez-Martínez, J. A. (2022). New insights into the role of porous microstructure on dynamic shear localization. En International Journal of Plasticity,148, p. 103150
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
European Commission
Sponsor:
The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme. Project PURPOSE, grant agreement 758056.
This paper provides new insights into the role of porous microstructure on dynamic shear
localization. For that purpose, we have performed 3D finite element calculations of electromagnetically
collapsing thick-walled cylinders. The geometry and dimensions ofThis paper provides new insights into the role of porous microstructure on dynamic shear
localization. For that purpose, we have performed 3D finite element calculations of electromagnetically
collapsing thick-walled cylinders. The geometry and dimensions of the cylindrical
specimens are taken from the experiments of Lovinger et al. (2015), and the loading and
boundary conditions from the 2D simulations performed by Lovinger et al. (2018). The mechanical
behavior of the material is modeled as elastic-plastic, with yielding described by the von
Mises criterion, an associated flow rule and isotropic hardening/softening, being the flow stress
dependent on strain, strain rate and temperature. Moreover, plastic deformation is considered to
be the only source of heat, and the analysis accounts for the thermal conductivity of the material.
The distinctive feature of this work is that we have followed the methodology developed by
Marvi-Mashhadi et al. (2021) to incorporate into the finite element calculations the actual porous
microstructure of 4 different additively manufactured materials –aluminium alloy AlSi10Mg,
stainless steel 316L, titanium alloy Ti6Al4V and Inconel 718– for which the initial void volume
fraction varies between 0.001% and 2%, and the pores size ranges from ≈ 6 μm to ≈ 110 μm. The
numerical simulations have been performed using the Coupled Eulerian-Lagrangian approach
available in ABAQUS/Explicit (2016), which allows to capture the shape evolution, coalescence
and collapse of the voids at large strains. To the authors’ knowledge, this paper contains the first
finite element simulations with explicit representation of the material porosity which demonstrate
that voids promote dynamic shear localization, acting as preferential sites for the nucleation
of the shear bands, speeding up their development, and tailoring their direction of
propagation. In addition, the numerical calculations bring out that for a given void volume
fraction more shear bands are nucleated as the number of voids increases, while the shear bands
are incepted earlier and develop faster as the size of the pores increases.[+][-]