A minimalistic approach to simulate multiple failure mechanisms of metal matrix fiber-reinforced composites by the phase field and cohesive zone models
Zhaoyang Hu, Xufei Suo, Feng Jiang, Yongxing Shen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a minimalistic numerical framework combining phase field and cohesive zone models to simulate multiple failure mechanisms in metal matrix fiber-reinforced composites, capturing interface debonding and matrix cracking effectively.
Contribution
The novel approach integrates phase field and cohesive zone models with minimal assumptions, enabling accurate simulation of failure mechanisms without complex geometric programming.
Findings
Accurately captures competition between matrix cracking and interface debonding.
Verifies framework accuracy with existing analytical and numerical results.
Shows potential for investigating complex crack behaviors in composites.
Abstract
The mechanical properties of metal matrix fiber-reinforced composites depend on many aspects of their structure in a complicated way. In this paper, we propose a \emph{minimalistic} approach to study interface debonding, matrix cracking, and their competition in metal matrix fiber-reinforced elastoplastic composites by numerical simulation. This approach combines a cohesive zone model for interface debonding and a phase field model for matrix cracking. The features of this framework are: (1) crack nucleation, propagation, and branching can be easily tracked without the need of geometric programming; (2) the interface debonding is determined merely by the CZM, but not interfered by the phase field in the bulk; (3) the cohesive interface has zero thickness instead of being regularized; (4) any reasonable cohesive law of interest is readily incorporated with very few constraints; (5)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNumerical methods in engineering · Composite Material Mechanics · Metal Forming Simulation Techniques
