Chapter 14
Chapter 14
Chapter 14
Nonlinear Materials
14.1 Basics of Nonlinear Materials
14.2 Belleville Washer
14.3 Planar Seal
14.4 Review
Section 14.1
Basics of Nonlinear Materials
Key Concepts
Elasticity
Linear Elasticity
Hyperelasticity
Plasticity
Plasticity
Yield Criteria
Hardening Rules
Plasticity Models
Hyperelasticity
Stress (Force/Area)
Linear/Nonlinear Materials
Strain (Dimensionless)
Stress (Force/Area)
Elastic/Plastic Materials
called elasticity.
Strain (Dimensionless)
[2] Plastic
material.
Stress (Force/Area)
[1] Elastic
material.
Strain (Dimensionless)
[3] Plastic strain.
Stress
Hysteresis
unstressing.
Strain
Stress
behavior.
Strain
Hyperelasticity
Nonlinear non-hysteresis elasticity are characterized
by that the stressing curve and the unstressing curve
are coincident: the energy is conserved in the cycles.
Stress (Force/Area)
Hyperelastic
material.
Strain (Dimensionless)
PLASTICITY
[1] Idealized
stress-strain
curve.
Stress (Force/Area)
Strain (Dimensionless)
[3] The stressstrain relation is
assumed linear
before Yield
point, and the
initial slope is the
Young's modulus.
Yield Criteria
Workbench uses von Mises criterion as the yield criterion, that is, a stress state
reaches yield state when the von Mises stress e is equal to the current uniaxial
yield strength y , or
1
2
2) +(
2
3) + (
2
1)
If the stress state is inside the cylinder, no yielding occurs. If the stress state is on
the surface, yielding occurs. No stress state can exist outside the yield surface.
, where
1
y
strength.
Hardening Rules
If the stress state is on the yield surface and the stress state continues to "push" the
yield surface outward, the size (radius) or the location of the yield surface will change.
The rule that describes how the yield surface changes its size or location is called a
hardening rule.
Kinematic hardening assumes that, when a stress state continues to "push" a yield
surface outward, the yield surface will change its location, according to the "push
direction," but preserve the size of the yield surface.
Isotropic hardening assumes that, when a stress state continues to "push" a yield
surface, the yield surface will expand its size, but preserve the axis of the yield
surface.
10
11
Stress
Stress
Strain
Strain
12
HYPERELASTICITY
Test Data Needed for Hyperelasticity
When the strain is large, all the moduli (tensile, compressive, shear, and bulk) can
not assume simple relations.
13
It is possible that a set of test data is obtained by superposing two sets of other test
data. For example, the set of uniaxial compressive test data can be obtained by adding a
set of hydrostatic compressive test data to a set of equibiaxial tensile test data.
[1] Uniaxial
compressive test.
[2] Equibiaxial
tensile test.
[3] Hydrostatic
compressive test.
14
300
[2] Equibiaxial
test data.
Stress (psi)
240
180
[3] Shear test
data.
120
[1] Uniaxial test
data.
60
0.2
0.5
Strain (Dimensionless)
0.7
15
Hyperelasticity Models
in Workbench
16
Section 14.2
Belleville Washer
Stress-strain
curve of the
steel in this case.
Problem Description
Stress (MPa)
280
270
260
250
0.001
0.002
0.003
0.004
17
18
40 mm
22 mm
1.5 mm
19
Force-versus-Displacement Curve
80
60
40
20
0
-20
[3] Let's explore the
residual stress at this point
when the external force is
completely released.
-40
-60
-80
0
0.2
[2] The curve below zero force has little
practical usage. It is the force required
to pull the spring back to its original
position.
0.4
0.6
Displacement (mm)
0.8
1.0
Residual Stresses
[10] Residual
equivalent stress.
20
Section 14.3
Planar Seal
Problem Description
200
[2] Biaxial
test.
Stress (psi)
160
120
[3] Shear
test.
80
40
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
21
1.100
.800
[2] Steel
plate.
R.200
.133
[1] Rubber
seal.
R.150
.867
R.150
R.050
.133
[3] Steel
plate.
Unit: in.
.333
.500
R.200
R.050
22
Results
23
A force-versus-displacement curve.
24