The Discontinuous Strain Method: accurately representing fatigue and failure
Leon Herrmann, Alireza Daneshyar, Stefan Kollmannsberger

TL;DR
The paper introduces the discontinuous strain method, a novel approach for more accurate fatigue and failure modeling that seamlessly captures crack initiation and propagation without unphysical behavior or energy artifacts.
Contribution
It presents a simple, mesh-independent, and easily integrable discontinuous strain technique that improves fatigue simulation accuracy in ductile damage models.
Findings
Accurately models pre- and post-cracking regimes
Ensures mesh-independent results with a characteristic length scale
Requires minimal modifications to existing routines
Abstract
Fatigue simulation requires accurate modeling of unloading and reloading. However, classical ductile damage models treat deformations after complete failure as irrecoverable -- which leads to unphysical behavior during unloading. This unphysical behavior stems from the continued accumulation of plastic strains after failure, resulting in an incorrect stress state at crack closure. As a remedy, we introduce a discontinuity strain in the additive elasto-plastic strain decomposition, which absorbs the excess strain after failure. This allows representing pre- and post-cracking regimes in a fully continuous setting, wherein the transition from the elasto-plastic response to cracking can be triggered at any arbitrary stage in a completely smooth manner. Moreover, the presented methodology does not exhibit the spurious energy release observed in hybrid approaches. In addition, our approach…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetal Forming Simulation Techniques · Fatigue and fracture mechanics · High-Velocity Impact and Material Behavior
