Full-range strain-hardening behavior of structural steels: Experimental identification and numerical simulation

被引:12
作者
Yao, Zucheng [1 ,2 ]
Wang, Wei [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Tongji Univ, State Key Lab Disaster Reduct Civil Engn, Shanghai 200092, Peoples R China
[2] Tongji Univ, Dept Struct Engn, Shanghai 200092, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Strain-hardening behavior; Image processing; Inverse finite element analysis; Necking; Structural steels; Particle swarm optimization; ELASTOPLASTIC CHARACTERIZATION; TENSILE TESTS; STRESS; CURVES; MODEL; NECKING;
D O I
10.1016/j.jcsr.2022.107329
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
The strain hardening behavior of structural steels is of significant importance for the elastoplastic response prediction and the collapse resistant evaluation of steel components. However, due to the necking occurrence in the uniaxial specimens, only the true stress-strain responses before necking are often obtained and applied for the plasticity identification of structural steels. This paper experimentally investigates the full-range strain-hardening behavior of four types of structural steels, including the ordinary structural steels Q235 and Q355, high strength steel Q460 and low-yield-point steel LYP225. The post-necking responses of these structural steels are determined with Bridgeman's correction theory and a proposed image-processing method. This method utilizes a series of morphological operations, processing the 2D grayscale images of smooth round bars under loading, to measure the instantaneous minimum radius and necking curvature. Based on the experimental results, a combination of the power and exponential laws is adopted to describe the full-range hardening behavior of structural steels. Numerical simulations of the experiments validate the Bridgeman and the MLR correction theories. A hybrid numerical-optimization method, employing a standard PSO algorithm, is further presented for the inverse identification of the full-range strain hardening behavior, and the applications to the Q460 and LYP225 steels validate this method.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 43 条
[21]   Machine-learning based temperature- and rate-dependent plasticity model: Application to analysis of fracture experiments on DP steel [J].
Li, Xueyang ;
Roth, Christian C. ;
Mohr, Dirk .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLASTICITY, 2019, 118 :320-344
[22]   Experimental issues in tensile Hopkinson bar testing and a model of dynamic hardening [J].
Mirone, G. ;
Corallo, D. ;
Barbagallo, R. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMPACT ENGINEERING, 2017, 103 :180-194
[23]   A new model for the elastoplastic characterization and the stress-strain determination on the necking section of a tensile specimen [J].
Mirone, G .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOLIDS AND STRUCTURES, 2004, 41 (13) :3545-3564
[24]   Hybrid fitting-numerical method for determining strain-hardening behavior of sheet metals [J].
Quoc Tuan Pham ;
Trung Nguyen-Thoi ;
Ha, Jinjin ;
Kim, Young-Suk .
MECHANICS OF MATERIALS, 2021, 161
[25]   Full-range stress-strain curves for stainless steel alloys [J].
Rasmussen, KJR .
JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTIONAL STEEL RESEARCH, 2003, 59 (01) :47-61
[26]   A general linear method to evaluate the hardening behaviour of metals at large strain with full-field measurements [J].
Rossi, M. ;
Lattanzi, A. ;
Barlat, F. .
STRAIN, 2018, 54 (03)
[27]   Extension of flow stress-strain curves of aerospace alloys after necking [J].
Saboori, M. ;
Champliaud, H. ;
Gholipour, J. ;
Gakwaya, A. ;
Savoie, J. ;
Wanjara, P. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY, 2016, 83 (1-4) :313-323
[28]   A modified particle swarm optimizer [J].
Shi, YH ;
Eberhart, R .
1998 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION - PROCEEDINGS, 1998, :69-73
[29]   Calibration of Continuum Cyclic Constitutive Models for Structural Steel Using Particle Swarm Optimization [J].
Smith, Christopher ;
Kanvinde, Amit ;
Deierlein, Gregory .
JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING MECHANICS, 2017, 143 (05)
[30]   PLASTIC INSTABILITY UNDER PLANE STRESS [J].
SWIFT, HW .
JOURNAL OF THE MECHANICS AND PHYSICS OF SOLIDS, 1952, 1 (01) :1-18