Interface damage model for thermomechanical degradation of heterogeneous materials
From MaRDI portal
Publication:704570
DOI10.1016/j.cma.2003.09.020zbMath1060.74509OpenAlexW2056099034MaRDI QIDQ704570
Publication date: 13 January 2005
Published in: Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cma.2003.09.020
Inhomogeneity in solid mechanics (74E05) Thermal effects in solid mechanics (74F05) Theories of fracture and damage (74A45)
Related Items
A chemo-mechano-thermodynamical contact theory for adhesion, friction, and (de)bonding reactions, On the simulation of cohesive fatigue effects in grain boundaries of a piezoelectric mesostructure, Consistent tangent formulation for 3D interface modeling of cracking/fracture in quasi-brittle materials, Thermodynamic-based interface model for cohesive brittle materials: application to bond slip in RC structures, Highly-conductive energetic coherent interfaces subject to in-plane degradation, The interphase model applied to the analysis of masonry structures, A thermo-electro-mechanically coupled cohesive zone formulation for predicting interfacial damage, A thermomechanical interface element formulation for finite deformations, A thermo-mechanical cohesive zone model, Computational modelling of microcracking effects in polycrystalline piezoelectric ceramics, Coupled thermo-mechanical interface model for concrete failure analysis under high temperature, Micromechanical modelling of cohesive thermoelastic cracking in orthotropic polycrystalline materials, Aspects of bifurcation in an isotropic elastic continuum with orthotropic inelastic interface, Multiscale diffusion-thermal-mechanical cohesive zone model for concrete
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- An analysis of strong discontinuities induced by strain-softening in rate-independent inelastic solids
- Numerical simulations of fast crack growth in brittle solids
- Computational modelling of impact damage in brittle materials
- Some aspects of interlaminar degradation in composites
- An `extended' volumetric/deviatoric formulation of anisotropic damage based on a pseudo-log rate.
- Thermo‐hydro‐mechanical modelling of high performance concrete at high temperatures
- On the numerical integration of interface elements