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Motion decomposition, frame-indifferent derivatives, and constitutive relations at large displacement gradients from the viewpoint of multilevel modeling

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Widespread approaches to generalizing geometrically linear constitutive relations to the case of large displacement gradients have been considered. These approaches are based on the replacement of the material derivatives of… Click to show full abstract

Widespread approaches to generalizing geometrically linear constitutive relations to the case of large displacement gradients have been considered. These approaches are based on the replacement of the material derivatives of stress and strain tensors by frame-indifferent corotational or convective derivatives. The correctness of choosing the indifferent derivatives is analyzed from a more general viewpoint of motion decomposition into rigid and strain-induced motion. It is shown that the use of the Zaremba-Jaumann derivative in constitutive relations corresponds to motion decomposition by the Cauchy-Helmholtz theorem according to which instantaneous rigid rotation of a material particle with small neighborhood is described by the vorticity tensor. The relations derived with the use of the so-called "logarithmic spin" are analyzed. It is noted that the spin tensors entering into these relations are not associated with the material fibers (in particular with the symmetry axes of anisotropic materials) during the entire studied process of deformation. Hence these spins do not describe the rotation of the reference frame (crystallographic one for metals) in which the material property tensor is defined. A new method of motion decomposition is proposed on the basis of a two-level (macro and meso) approach for single and polycrystalline metals. The mesoscopic spin is determined by the rotation rate of the corotational coordinate system associated with the crystallographic direction and crystallographic plane. Mesoscopic constitutive relations are formulated using the proposed spin. The spin of a representative macrovolume is determined by averaging the spins of the crystallites contained in this volume. This spin is used to formulate rate-type elastic constitutive equations. Examples are given to illustrate the stress state determination for loading along closed strain paths and two-segment paths for isotropic and anisotropic (with cubic symmetry, hcp) elastic materials, and an elastoviscoplastic fcc crystallite. The determination is carried out by using the corotational derivatives in the constitutive relations which are obtained by different motion decomposition methods.

Keywords: motion; constitutive relations; spin; large displacement; motion decomposition

Journal Title: Physical Mesomechanics
Year Published: 2017

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