Numéro |
J. Phys. IV France
Volume 134, August 2006
EURODYMAT 2006 - 8th International Conference on Mechanical and Physical Behaviour of Materials under Dynamic Loading
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Page(s) | 1215 - 1223 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/jp4:2006134185 | |
Publié en ligne | 26 juillet 2006 |
J. Cirne, R. Dormeval, et al.
J. Phys. IV France 134 (2006) 1215-1223
DOI: 10.1051/jp4:2006134185
Fracture simulation of elastomer blended polypropylene based on elastoviscoplastic constitutive equation with craze and tensile softening law
H. MaeHonda R&D Co., Ltd., 4630 Shimotakanezawa, Haga-machi, Tochigi 321-3393, Japan
Published online: 26 July 2006
Abstract
The strong strain-rate dependence, neck propagation and
craze evolution characterize the large plastic deformation and fracture
behavior of polymer. In the latest study, Kobayashi, Tomii and Shizawa
suggested the elastoviscoplastic constitutive equation based on craze
evolution and annihilation and then applied it to the plane strain issue of
polymer. In the previous study, the author applied their suggested
elastoviscoplastic constitutive equation with craze effect to the three
dimensional shell and then showed that the load displacement history was in
good agreement with the experimental result including only microscopic crack
such as crazes. For the future industrial applications, the macroscopic
crack has to be taken into account. Thus, the main objective of this study
is to propose the tensile softening equation and then add it to the
elastoviscoplastic constitutive equation with craze effect so that the load
displacement history can be roughly simulated during the macroscopic crack
propagation. The tested material in this study is the elastomer blended
polypropylene used in the interior and exterior of automobiles. First, the
material properties are obtained based on the tensile test results at wide
range of strain rates: 10 - 4-102 (1/sec). Next, the compact
tension test is conducted and then the tensile softening parameters are
fixed. Then, the dart impact test is carried out in order to obtain the load
displacement history and also observe the macroscopic crack propagation at
high strain rate. Finally, the fracture behavior is simulated and then
compared with the experimental results. It is shown that the predictions of
the constitutive equation with the proposed tensile softening equation are
in good agreement with the experimental results for the future industrial
applications.
© EDP Sciences 2006