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IssuesArchive of Issues2001-5pp.89-93

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N. G. Bourago and A. N. Kovshov, "A model of fracturing material with dilatancy," Mech. Solids. 36 (5), 89-93 (2001)
Year 2001 Volume 36 Number 5 Pages 89-93
Title A model of fracturing material with dilatancy
Author(s) N. G. Bourago (Moscow)
A. N. Kovshov (Moscow)
Abstract This work deals with constitutive relations describing the thermomechanical behavior of geomaterials. A general thermodynamical method for the construction of constitutive relations for continuous media with finitely many state parameters is described in [1] and is a generalization of the investigations started in [2-5]. In the present paper, the thermodynamical method is systematically applied to modeling deformation of geomaterials. In contrast to previous publications, our construction of the model requires only that the free energy and the dissipation velocity be specified as functions of state parameters. Then, the dilatancy and other properties of geomaterials become mere consequences.

Well known experimental studies show that geomaterials possess some distinctive properties, such as plastic compressibility and non-monotonicity of the "shear versus tangential stress" loading diagram which, together with a hardening segment contains a "dropping" segment corresponding to material softening. Fracture of geomaterials occurs gradually, with the accumulation of various types of microdefects; moreover, wave propagation velocities in geomaterials depend on the damage measure and become lower with its increase.

As shown by numerous experiments, a characteristic feature of geomaterials is their dilatancy, i.e., the existence of a dependence of volume strain on shear strains.

The dilatancy of geomaterials can be described in many ways. As shown in [6], if the deformation of a geomaterial is described by the equations of plastic flow with the associated law and the yield condition of the von Mises type with the yield function depending on the first invariant of the stress tensor, then dilatancy takes place. Moreover, the mechanical energy dissipation rate and the volume expansion rate in the case of plane deformation are proportional to the maximal shear rate, with the coefficient of proportionality equal to the internal friction coefficient.

This relation implies that there is a dependence between the components of the plastic strain rate tensor, and this dependence is called the dilatancy condition or the dilatancy dependence. In [7-9], the dilatancy condition is taken as an assumption and has the form of a kinematic constraint on the plastic strain rate components; this constraint involves the so-called dilatancy rate. As a result, the sign of the dilatancy rate determines the possibility of loosening or compaction of the dilating geomaterial under shear. Moreover, the constraint relating the density of the medium and the pressure p is differential and this differential constraint is not always integrable. The function p(ρ) may be different for different deformation paths of the material elements.

The possibility of constructing models of plastic deformation of materials (in particular, loose materials) on the basis of the properties of the dissipation function was considered in [10, 11]. It was shown that for a prescribed dilatancy dependence, the dissipation function can be defined in such a way that the constitutive relations for a medium with dilatancy can be introduced by means of the associated law. The dilatancy dependence on the form of the stress state is studied in [12], where the associated plastic flow law is used with a suitably chosen structure of the yield function and the dilatancy condition is not prescribed in advance.

Thus, in order to describe the behavior of geomaterials, various models have been proposed, with the above properties more or less taken into account. In the so-called models of "gradual fracture", the constitutive relations rely on the associated elastic-plastic flow law and the yield surface is specified so as to take into account the phenomena of hardening, softening, and "residual" strength. In continuous fracture models, which are currently an object of intensive studies, fracture of geomaterials is described in terms of a new structural parameter referred to as the damage parameter. This parameter pertains to the accumulation of microdefects in a deformed medium and is responsible for the decrease of wave propagation velocities in geomaterials. In the models of geomaterials with damage, which seem physically most adequate, damage accumulation rate is introduced and its backward influence on the stress-strain state is taken into account in terms of the dependence of elastic and plastic properties on the damage. The constitutive relations in damage models are often constructed on the basis of micromechanical concepts regarding the processes of deformation and fracture in geomaterials.

The constitutive relations should agree with the general principles of thermomechanics, i.e., be compatible with the laws of thermodynamics, the dimensional theory, and the principles of invariance and objectivity. These requirements can be easily met when constructing the constitutive relations by the thermodynamical method [1] used below.
References
1.  N. G. Bourago, A. I. Glushko, and A. N. Kovshov, "Thermodynamical method for constructing constitutive relations for models of continuous media," Izv. AN. MTT [Mechanics of Solids], No. 6, pp. 4-15, 2000.
2.  V. I. Kondaurov and V. N. Kukudzhanov, "On constitutive equations and numerical solution of the multidimensional problems of the dynamics of nonisothermic elastic-plastic media with finite deformations," Arch. Mech., Vol. 31, No. 5, pp. 623-647, 1979.
3.  N. G. Bourago and V. N. Kukudzhanov, Solution of Elastoplastic Problems by the Finite-Element Method, Software Package "ASTRA" [in Russian], Preprint 326, In-t Problem Mekhaniki AN SSSR, Moscow, 1988.
4.  V. N. Kukudzhanov and K. Santaoja, "Thermodynamics of viscoelastic media with internal parameters," Izv. AN. MTT [Mechanics of Solids], No. 2, pp. 115-126, 1997.
5.  V. N. Kukudzhanov, N. G. Bourago, A. N. Kovshov, V. L. Ivanov, and D. N. Shneiderman, On the Problem of Damage and Localization of Strains, Preprint 95:11, Chalmers Univ. Technol., Goetheborg, 1995.
6.  D. C. Drucker and W. Prager, "Mechanics of solids and plastic analysis or limiting design," in Mechanics. New Trends in World Science. Constitutive Laws in the Mechanics of Soil [Russian translation], pp. 166-177, Mir, Moscow, 1975.
7.  V. N. Nikolaevskii and N. M. Syrnikov, "On the limiting flow of a loose dilatant medium," Izv. AN. MTT [Mechanics of Solids], No. 2, pp. 159-166, 1970.
8.  V. N. Nikolaevskii, "Constitutive equations of plastic deformation of a loose material," PMM [Applied Mathematics and Mechanics], Vol. 35, No. 6, pp. 1070-1082, 1971.
9.  V. N. Nikolaevskii, Postface to the book. Current Trends in Soil Mechanics [Russian translation], Mir, Moscow, 1975.
10.  I. A. Berezhnoi, D. D. Ivlev, and V. B. Chadov, "On the construction of a model of loose media on the basis of the definition of the dissipation function," Doklady AN SSSR, Vol. 213, No. 6, pp. 1270-1273, 1973.
11.  Ya. A. Kamenyarzh, "On the construction of models of plastic media by means of the dissipation function," Doklady AN SSSR, Vol. 215, No. 4, pp. 804-806, 1974.
12.  E. V. Lomakin, "Plastic flow of a dilatant medium under plane strain conditions," Izv. AN. MTT [Mechanics of Solids], No. 6, pp. 58-68, 2000.
13.  H. Ziegler, Extremal Principles of Thermodynamics of Irreversible Processes in Continuum Mechanics [Russian translation], Mir, Moscow, 1966.
Received 15 May 2001
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