An Approach to Elastoplasticity at Large Deformations
Konstantin Volokh

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new finite elastoplasticity approach combining hyperelasticity with additive velocity gradient decomposition, avoiding issues of hypoelasticity and incompatible plastic configurations in large deformation analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel elastoplasticity framework that integrates hyperelasticity with additive velocity gradient decomposition, improving physical consistency in large deformation modeling.
Findings
The new model avoids nonphysical energy dissipation.
It extends classical metal plasticity theory to large deformations.
The approach is applied to simple shear deformation analysis.
Abstract
Finite plasticity theories are still a subject of controversy and lively discussions. Among the approaches to finite elastoplasticity two became especially popular. The first, implemented in the commercial finite element codes, is based on the introduction of a hypoelastic constitutive law and the additive elastic-plastic decomposition of the deformation rate tensor. Unfortunately, the use of hypoelasticity may lead to a nonphysical creation or dissipation of energy in a closed deformation cycle. In order to replace hypoelasticity with hyperelasticity the second popular approach based on the multiplicative elastic-plastic decomposition of the deformation gradient tensor was developed. Unluckily, the latter theory is not perfect as well because it introduces intermediate plastic configurations, which are geometrically incompatible, non-unique, and, consequently, fictitious physically. In…
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