36 resultados para President David Angel
Resumo:
Las probetas cilíndricas fabricadas con materiales metálicos de elevada ductilidad, como el aluminio o el cobre, sometidas a tracción suelen presentar una rotura comúnmente denominada rotura en copa y cono, debido a su geometría. Este tipo de rotura se reproduce numéricamente con éxito mediante el modelo de Gurson-Tvergaard- Needleman, cuya formulación matemática se basa en el fenómeno físico de nucleación, crecimiento y coalescencia de microhuecos. A diferencia de dichos materiales, las barras de acero perlítico, material con una ductilidad apreciable, presentan un frente de rotura plano que no puede simularse correctamente con los modelos antes mencionados, apareciendo una región interior de daño que, en principio, también puede atribuirse a un fenómeno de nucleación y crecimiento de microhuecos, mientras que en el exterior aparece una zona cuya micrografía permite asociar su rotura a un mecanismo de clivaje. En trabajos anteriores los autores han presentado un elemento de intercara cohesivo dependiente de la triaxialidad de tensiones que, incorporado a un código de elementos finitos, permite reproducir de forma razonable el daño que se desarrolla en la región interior mencionada. En este trabajo se presentan los resultados de una campaña experimental que permite validar el modelo desarrollado. Para ello, se ensayan probetas de diferentes diámetros y se comparan los resultados con los obtenidos numéricamente, empleando tres bases extensométricas diferentes en cada uno de los diámetros. Los resultados numéricos se ajustan razonablemente bien a los obtenidos experimentalmente.The cylindrical specimens made of high-ductility metallic materials, such as aluminium and copper, usually fail showing a fracture surface commonly known as cup-cone fracture because of its shape. This type of fracture is successfully reproduced using the Gurson-Tvergaard-Needleman model, which is based on the physical process of nucleation, growth and coalescence of microvoids. Unlike these materials, pearlitic steel bars, which are considerably ductile, show a flat fracture surface that cannot be correctly reproduced with the aforementioned models. In this flat fracture surface, a dark region can be observed in the centre of the specimen, which is the result of a process of nucleation and growth of microvoids, while in the rest of the fracture surface a different region can be identified, which a micrographic study reveals to be the result of a process of cleavage. In previous works, the authors presented a triaxiality-dependent cohesive interface element that, implemented in a finite element code, can reproduce in a reasonably accurate manner the damage that takes place in the dark region mentioned before. The results of an experimental campaign designed to validate the model are presented in this paper. For it, different diameter specimens are tested and these results are compared to those obtained with the numerical models, using three different initial lengths for the strain. Numerical results agree reasonably well with those obtained experimentally.
Resumo:
Las probetas cilíndricas fabricadas con materiales metálicos de elevada ductilidad, como el aluminio o el cobre, sometidas a tracción suelen presentar una rotura comúnmente denominada rotura en copa y cono, debido a su geometría. Este tipo de rotura se reproduce numéricamente con éxito mediante el modelo de Gurson-Tvergaard- Needleman, cuya formulación matemática se basa en el fenómeno físico de nucleación, crecimiento y coalescencia de microhuecos. A diferencia de dichos materiales, las barras de acero perlítico, material con una ductilidad apreciable, presentan un frente de rotura plano que no puede simularse correctamente con los modelos antes mencionados, apareciendo una región interior de daño que, en principio, también puede atribuirse a un fenómeno de nucleación y crecimiento de microhuecos, mientras que en el exterior aparece una zona cuya micrografía permite asociar su rotura a un mecanismo de clivaje. En trabajos anteriores los autores han presentado un elemento de intercara cohesivo dependiente de la triaxialidad de tensiones que, incorporado a un código de elementos finitos, permite reproducir de forma razonable el daño que se desarrolla en la región interior mencionada. En este trabajo se presentan los resultados de una campaña experimental que permite validar el modelo desarrollado. Para ello, se ensayan probetas de diferentes diámetros y se comparan los resultados con los obtenidos numéricamente, empleando tres bases extensométricas diferentes en cada uno de los diámetros. Los resultados numéricos se ajustan razonablemente bien a los obtenidos experimentalmente.The cylindrical specimens made of high-ductility metallic materials, such as aluminium and copper, usually fail showing a fracture surface commonly known as cup-cone fracture because of its shape. This type of fracture is successfully reproduced using the Gurson-Tvergaard-Needleman model, which is based on the physical process of nucleation, growth and coalescence of microvoids. Unlike these materials, pearlitic steel bars, which are considerably ductile, show a flat fracture surface that cannot be correctly reproduced with the aforementioned models. In this flat fracture surface, a dark region can be observed in the centre of the specimen, which is the result of a process of nucleation and growth of microvoids, while in the rest of the fracture surface a different region can be identified, which a micrographic study reveals to be the result of a process of cleavage. In previous works, the authors presented a triaxiality-dependent cohesive interface element that, implemented in a finite element code, can reproduce in a reasonably accurate manner the damage that takes place in the dark region mentioned before. The results of an experimental campaign designed to validate the model are presented in this paper. For it, different diameter specimens are tested and these results are compared to those obtained with the numerical models, using three different initial lengths for the strain. Numerical results agree reasonably well with those obtained experimentally.
Resumo:
This paper summarizes the research activities focused on the behaviour of concrete and concrete structures subjected to blast loading carried out by the Department of Materials Science of the Technical University of Madrid (PUM). These activities comprise the design and construction of a test bench that allows for testing up to four planar concrete specimens with one single explosion, the study of the performance of different protection concepts for concrete structures and, finally, the development of a numerical model for the simulation of concrete structural elements subjected to blast. Up to date 6 different types of concrete have been studied, from plain normal strength concrete, to high strength concrete, including also fibre reinforced concretes with different types of fibres. The numerical model is based on the Cohesive Crack Model approach, and has been developed for the LSDYNA finite element code through a user programmed subroutine. Despite its simplicity, the model is able to predict the failure patterns of the concrete slabs tested with a high level of accuracy
Resumo:
8th International Conference on Fracture Mechanics of Concrete and Concrete Structures (FraMCoS8).
Resumo:
This article presents a new material model developed with the aim of analyzing failure of blunt notched components made of nonlinear brittle materials. The model, which combines the cohesive crack model with Hencky's theory of total deformations, is used to simulate an experimental benchmark carried out previously by the authors. Such combination is achieved through the embedded crack approach concept. In spite of the unavailability of precise material data, the numerical predictions obtained show good agreement with the experimental results.
Resumo:
The design and development of a new method for performing fracture toughness tests under impulsive loadings using explosives is presented. The experimental set-up was complemented with pressure transducers and strain gauges in order to measure, respectively, the blast wave that reached the specimen and the loading history. Fracture toughness tests on a 7017-T73 aluminium alloy were carried out by using this device under impulsive loadings. Previous studies reported that such aluminium alloy had very little strain rate sensitivity, which made it an ideal candidate for comparison at different loading rates. The fracture-initiation toughness values of the 7017-T73 aluminium alloy obtained at impulsive loadings did not exhibit a significant variation from the cases studied at lower loading rates. Therefore, the method and device developed for measuring the dynamic fracture-initiation toughness under impulsive loadings was considered suitable for such a purpose