100% found this document useful (1 vote)
506 views

Midas Concrete Damage

The concrete damaged plasticity model in Midas: 1) Can model concrete and other quasi-brittle materials subjected to various loading conditions. 2) Accounts for different yield strengths in tension and compression as well as degradation of elastic strengths under loading. 3) Was developed based on models that can simulate the stress-strain behavior of concrete under uniaxial and cyclic loading conditions.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (1 vote)
506 views

Midas Concrete Damage

The concrete damaged plasticity model in Midas: 1) Can model concrete and other quasi-brittle materials subjected to various loading conditions. 2) Accounts for different yield strengths in tension and compression as well as degradation of elastic strengths under loading. 3) Was developed based on models that can simulate the stress-strain behavior of concrete under uniaxial and cyclic loading conditions.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 9

The concrete damaged plasticity model in Midas:

• provides a general capability for modeling concrete and other quasi-brittle materials in all types of structures
(beams, trusses, shells, and solids);
• is designed for applications in which concrete is subjected to monotonic, cyclic, and/or dynamic loading
under low confining pressures;
• can apply a different yield strengths in tension and compression
• can consider a degradation effect of different elastic strengths in tension and compression
Strain-Yield Stress Curve for Compression Behavior Input of Plasticity Material in Material Data

Strain-Yield Stress Curve for Tensile Behavior

Define of Plastic Material


with Concrete-Damage Model
Concrete damaged plasticity models in Midas were developed based on the model proposed by
Lubliner (1989) and Lee&Fenves (1998).

t

 t0

* E0 = Modulus of Elasticity
* dt : damage factor for tension (0≤dt ≤1)
E0
d  d  ,  

tpl 
   pl  ,   h  ,     pl
1dt  E0 c 

tpl  tel t

Response of concrete to uniaxial loading in tension


c

 cu

 c0

* dc : damage factor for compression (0≤ dc ≤1)


E0 d  d  ,  

1dt EE0
c 0

cpl  cel c

Response of concrete to uniaxial loading in compression


Uniaxial cyclic conditions

t
 1-d = 1
st  1  wt r * ( 11 ) 0  wt  1  St = 1
 t0
sc  1  wc 1  r * ( 11 )  0  wc  1  Sc = 0
1 if  11  0 (In tension)
r * ( 11 )  H  11   
0 if  11  0 (In compression)

E0 wt  0, wc  1 (assumed in Gen)

1dt  E0

t
wc  1  (1-stdc) (1-scdt) E0 = E0
wc  0
The effect of the compression stiffness recovery parameter
t

st  1  wt r * ( 11 ) 0  wt  1  St = 1
sc  1  wc 1  r * ( 11 )  0  wc  1  Sc = 1  t0

1 if  11  0 (In tension)
r ( 11 )  H  11   
*
E0
0 if  11  0 (In compression)

wt  1 1dt  E0
wt  0

(1  d t )(1  d c ) E 0 wc  0
(1  d c ) E0 wc  1 
 (1-stdc) (1-scdt) E0
E0
= (1-dc) (1-dt) E0

Uniaxial load cycle (tension-compression-tension)


assuming default values for the stiffness recovery factor( wt  0, wc  1 )
ˆ 2
1
1
 
 I1  3 J 2  ˆ 2   c 0
 t0

ˆ1

Effective plastic stain


1
1
 
 I1  3J 2  ˆ1   c 0

is the ratio of initial equibiaxial   b0 


b 0,  c0
compressive yield stress
to initial uniaxial compressive
yield stress 1
1
 
 I1  3 J 2   c 0

Cc(k), Ct(k) are compression


and tension strength by k Yield function for plane stress
Analysis Result of the model with Cyclic Loading

Loading pattern for cyclic loading

Stress vs. strain in the cyclic loading

Input

Cyclic compressive loading


(compression tension  compression)
Stress vs. Strain

Sxx(GEN) Sxx(ABAQUS)
1.0E+07

5.0E+06

0.0E+00
-0.02 -0.01 -0.01 0.00 0.01 0.01 0.02

-5.0E+06
Stress (N/m2)

-1.0E+07

-1.5E+07

-2.0E+07

-2.5E+07

Cyclic tensile loading (tension  compression  compression)


-3.0E+07
Strain

You might also like