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An Improved Plastically Dilatant Unified Viscoplastic Constitutive Formulation for Multiscale Analysis of Polymer Matrix Composites Under High Strain Rate LoadingPolymer matrix composites are commonly used to fabricate energy-absorbing structures expected to experience impact loading. As such, a detailed understanding of the dynamic response of the constituent materials is necessary. Since the rate, temperature, and pressure dependence of carbon fiber reinforced polymer matrix composites are primarily manifestations of the rate, temperature, and pressure dependence of the polymer matrix, it is crucial that the constitutive behavior of the matrix be accurately characterized. In this work, an existing unified viscoplastic constitutive formulation is extended to ensure thermodynamic consistency and to more accurately account for the tension-compression asymmetry observed in the response of polymeric materials. A new plastic potential function is proposed, and elementary loading conditions are utilized to determine relations between model constants to ensure nonnegative plastic dissipation, a necessary thermodynamic requirement. Expressions for plastic Poisson’s ratios are derived and are bounded by enforcing nonnegative plastic dissipation. The model is calibrated against available experimental data from tests conducted over a range of strain rates, temperatures, and loading cases on a representative thermoset epoxy; good correlation between simulations and experimental data is obtained. Temperature rises due to the conversion of plastic work to heat are computed via the adiabatic heat energy equation. The viscoplastic polymer model is then used as a constitutive model in the generalized method of cells micromechanics theory to investigate the effects of matrix adiabatic heating on the high strain rate response of a unidirectional composite. The thermodynamic consistency of the model ensures plastic dissipation can only cause an increase in temperature. Simulation results indicate that significant thermal softening due to the conversion of plastic work to heat is observed in the composite for matrix dominated deformation modes.
Document ID
20200000653
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
Christopher Sorini
(Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona, United States)
Aditi Chattopadhyay
(Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona, United States)
Robert K Goldberg
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
Date Acquired
February 3, 2020
Publication Date
January 1, 2020
Subject Category
Structural Mechanics
Report/Patent Number
GRC-E-DAA-TN74917
E-19767
Report Number: NASA/TM—2020-220386
Report Number: GRC-E-DAA-TN74917
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 081876.01.03.05
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX15AU36H
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Impact loading
Finite element method
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