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Keywords = inelastic dilatation

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17 pages, 6531 KiB  
Article
Influence of Confining Pressure on Nonlinear Failure Characteristics of Coal Subjected to Triaxial Compression
by Qiuping Li, Jie Liu, Shouqing Lu, Zaiquan Wang, Hao Wang, Yimeng Wu, Yupu Wang, Di Ying and Mingjie Li
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20(1), 105; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010105 - 21 Dec 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1764
Abstract
The stress of a coal seam increases with an increase in the mining depth, which makes the failure mechanism of a coal mass more complex. To reveal the deformation and failure law of deep coal, a series of triaxial experiments was carried out [...] Read more.
The stress of a coal seam increases with an increase in the mining depth, which makes the failure mechanism of a coal mass more complex. To reveal the deformation and failure law of deep coal, a series of triaxial experiments was carried out via laboratory experiments and numerical simulation experiments to analyze the influence of the confining stress on the nonlinear failure characteristics of coal. Based on the crack-propagation model, the values for the inelastic flexibility S1 and the damage variable D were calculated. The results showed that the value of S1 decreased with an increase in the confining stress, which indicated that the increase in the confining pressure could inhibit the crack propagation and that the inhibitory effect was more obvious when the confining pressure increased in a small range of 4 to 12 MPa. The damage variable decreased with an increase in the confining pressure at the yield point; moreover, with an increase in the initial confining pressure, the damage rate gradually decreased. The coal body changed from the compression state to the expansion state when moving from the yield point to the peak point, and the compression value of the yield point and the dilation value of the peak point increased with the increase in the confining pressure. After the coal body entered the yield stage, the change in the confining pressure had a more significant effect on the damage to the coal body. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Full Life-Cycle Safety Management of Coal and Rock Dynamic Disasters)
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15 pages, 4983 KiB  
Article
Nonlinear Numerical Assessment of Exterior Beam-Column Connections with Low-Strength Concrete
by Basem S. Abdelwahed, Mosbeh R. Kaloop and Waleed E. El-Demerdash
Buildings 2021, 11(11), 562; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11110562 - 21 Nov 2021
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 3858
Abstract
The ductility and capacity of reinforced concrete beam-column connections depend mainly on the concrete’s strength and the provided reinforcements. This study investigates numerically the role of low-strength concrete in beam-column joints utilizing ABAQUS software. In this simulation, a newly developed stress-inelastic strain relationship [...] Read more.
The ductility and capacity of reinforced concrete beam-column connections depend mainly on the concrete’s strength and the provided reinforcements. This study investigates numerically the role of low-strength concrete in beam-column joints utilizing ABAQUS software. In this simulation, a newly developed stress-inelastic strain relationship for both confined and unconfined low-strength concrete is used. This study recommended a specific value of the concrete dilation angle for both substandard and standard joints. Also, stirrups’ yield strength value was found to play an insignificant role in improving the shear resistance of such joints with low-strength. In addition, the joint shear strength prediction using empirical models that implicitly consider the stirrups contribution in improving joint resistance was found to be better than the prediction of other models that explicitly consider the stirrups’ presence. The numerical results also showed that the use of a diagonal steel haunch as a joint retrofitting technique significantly increases the joint shear capacity and changes its brittle shear failure into a ductile beam flexural failure. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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17 pages, 1449 KiB  
Article
Inelastic Behavior of Polyoxymethylene for Wide Strain Rate and Temperature Ranges: Constitutive Modeling and Identification
by Yevgeniya Filanova, Johannes Hauptmann, Frank Längler and Konstantin Naumenko
Materials 2021, 14(13), 3667; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14133667 - 1 Jul 2021
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2523
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to present experimental data and the constitutive model for the inelastic behavior of polyoxymethylene in wide strain rate and temperature ranges. To capture the non-linearity of the stress responses for both loading and unloading regimes, the composite [...] Read more.
The aim of this paper is to present experimental data and the constitutive model for the inelastic behavior of polyoxymethylene in wide strain rate and temperature ranges. To capture the non-linearity of the stress responses for both loading and unloading regimes, the composite model of inelastic deformation is utilized and further developed. The equivalent inelastic strain rate is described by the Prandtl–Eyring law, while the temperature dependence is characterized by the modified Arrhenius-type law. Generalized equivalent stress and the flow rule are formulated to capture pressure sensitivity, transverse strain and volumetric strain responses. The results obtained by the constitutive law are compared with experimental data for stress vs. axial strain from standard tension tests as well as with axial and transverse strains measured by digital image correlation. The developed composite model is able to capture the non-linearity of stress–strain curves for complex loading paths within the small strain regime. For higher strains, apart from geometrically non-linear theory, evolution laws for the volume fraction of the constituents should be modified and calibrated. For the small strain regime, the inelastic dilatation is negligible. For higher axial strain values, a decrease in Poisson’s ratio under tension and increase in it under compression are observed. The Drucker–Prager-type equivalent stress and the developed flow rule provide a better description of both the transverse and volumetric strains than that of the classical von Mises–Odqvist flow rules. Full article
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24 pages, 4710 KiB  
Article
Experimental Investigation and Micromechanical Modeling of Elastoplastic Damage Behavior of Sandstone
by Chaojun Jia, Qiang Zhang and Susheng Wang
Materials 2020, 13(15), 3414; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13153414 - 3 Aug 2020
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2647
Abstract
The mechanical behavior of the sandstone at the dam site is important to the stability of the hydropower station to be built in Southwest China. A series of triaxial compression tests under different confining pressures were conducted in the laboratory. The critical stresses [...] Read more.
The mechanical behavior of the sandstone at the dam site is important to the stability of the hydropower station to be built in Southwest China. A series of triaxial compression tests under different confining pressures were conducted in the laboratory. The critical stresses were determined and the relationship between the critical stress and confining pressure were analyzed. The Young’s modulus increases non-linearly with the confining pressure while the plastic strain increment Nϕ and the dilation angle ϕ showed a negative response. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) tests showed that the failure of the sandstone under compression is a coupled process of crack growth and frictional sliding. Based on the experimental results, a coupled elastoplastic damage model was proposed within the irreversible thermodynamic framework. The plastic deformation and damage evolution were described by using the micromechanical homogenization method. The plastic flow is inherently driven by the damage evolution. Furthermore, a numerical integration algorithm was developed to simulate the coupled elastoplastic damage behavior of sandstone. The main inelastic properties of the sandstone were well captured. The model will be implemented into the finite element method (FEM) to estimate the excavation damaged zones (EDZs) which can provide a reference for the design and construction of such a huge hydropower project. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Construction and Building Materials)
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23 pages, 1869 KiB  
Article
Unified Formulation for a Triaxial Elastoplastic Constitutive Law for Concrete
by Rabah Hammoud, Rachid Boukhili and Ammar Yahia
Materials 2013, 6(9), 4226-4248; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma6094226 - 23 Sep 2013
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 6590
Abstract
A constitutive model to describe the triaxial load-response spectrum of plain concrete in both tension and shear was developed. The inelastic phenomena are described using the plastic flow with direction determined by the gradient of the plastic potential. A new plastic potential is [...] Read more.
A constitutive model to describe the triaxial load-response spectrum of plain concrete in both tension and shear was developed. The inelastic phenomena are described using the plastic flow with direction determined by the gradient of the plastic potential. A new plastic potential is introduced and experimentally fitted to ensure better estimate of the load direction. This approach allows to control the inelastic dilatancy in terms of the inelastic deformation of the material. By overlaying the plastic potential on modified Etse and Willam’s yield surface (both defined on the Haigh–Westergaard coordinates), the results showed that the two curves do not undergo similar stress states for a given strength level. It is, therefore, necessary that each surface goes through the current stress state to ensure adequate evaluation of normal vectors. A closed-form solution to accurately predict the triaxial stress state in concrete has been proposed. The predictive capabilities of the proposed model are evaluated by comparing predicted and measured stresses. The proposed model is shown to be accurate in predicting stress state of concrete. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Constitutive Behavior of Composite Materials)
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