Title of article
Objective evaluation of linearization procedures in nonlinear homogenization: A methodology and some implications on the accuracy of micromechanical schemes
Author/Authors
Amna Rekik، نويسنده , , François Auslender، نويسنده , , Michel Bornert، نويسنده , , André Zaoui، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
29
From page
3468
To page
3496
Abstract
A systematic methodology for an accurate evaluation of various existing linearization procedures sustaining mean fields
theories for nonlinear composites is proposed and applied to recent homogenization methods. It relies on the analysis of a
periodic composite for which an exact resolution of both the original nonlinear homogenization problem and the linear
homogenization problems associated with the chosen linear comparison composite (LCC) with an identical microstructure
is possible. The effects of the sole linearization scheme can then be evaluated without ambiguity. This methodology is
applied to three different two-phase materials in which the constitutive behavior of at least one constituent is nonlinear
elastic (or viscoplastic): a reinforced composite, a material in which both phases are nonlinear and a porous material. Comparisons
performed on these three materials between the considered homogenization schemes and the reference solution
bear out the relevance and the performances of the modified second-order procedure introduced by Ponte Castan˜eda in
terms of prediction of the effective responses. However, under the assumption that the field statistics (first and second
moments) are given by the local fields in the LCC, all the recent nonlinear homogenization procedures still fail to provide
an accurate enough estimate of the strain statistics, especially for composites with high contrast.
Keywords
continuum mechanics , Nonlinear behavior , linearization , Secant , Affine , Second-order , homogenization
Journal title
International Journal of Solids and Structures
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
International Journal of Solids and Structures
Record number
449090
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