Robustness and stability of the Continuum Strong Discontinuity Approach (CSDA) to material failure are addressed. After identification of lack of symmetry of the finite element formulation and material softening in the constitutive model as possible causes of loss of robustness, two remedies are proposed: 1) a symmetric version of the elementary enriched finite element with embedded discontinuities, and 2) an implicit-explicit integration of the internal variable, in the constitutive model, that renders the tangent constitutive algorithmic operator positive definite and constant. The combination of both developments leads to finite element formulations with constant and non-singular tangent structural stiffness, these allowing dramatic improvements in terms of robustness and computational costs. After assessing the convergence properties of the new strategies, three-dimensional numerical simulations of failure problems illustrate the performance of the proposed procedures.
a b s t r a c tMaterial properties of soft fibrous tissues are highly conditioned by the hierarchical structure of this kind of composites. Collagen based tissues present, at decreasing length scales, a complex framework of fibres, fibrils, tropocollagen molecules and amino-acids. Understanding the mechanical behaviour at nano-scale level is critical to accurately incorporate this structural information in phenomenological damage models. In this work we derive a relationship between the mechanical and geometrical properties of the fibril constituents and the soft tissue material parameters at macroscopic scale. A Hodge-Petruska two-dimensional model has been used to describe the fibrils as staggered arrays of tropocollagen molecules. After a mechanical characterisation of each of the fibril components, two fibril failures modes have been defined related with two planes of weakness. A phenomenological continuous damage model with regularised softening was presented along with meso-structurally based definitions for its material parameters. Finally, numerical analysis at fibril, fibre and tissue levels are presented to show the capabilities of the model.
The paper focuses on the Continuum Strong Discontinuity Approach (CSDA) to fracture mechanics, and the traction-separation cohesive laws induced from continuum dissipative models as their projections onto the failure interface. They are compared with the cohesive laws commonly used for the fracture simulation in quasi-brittle materials, typically concrete. Emphasis is placed in the analysis of the mechanical stress-strain states induced by the CSDA into the fracture process zone: first when the damage mechanism is initiated and, after, when the cohesive model determines the crack response. The influence of the material parameters, particularly the fracture energy and the initial continuum softening modulus, in the obtained phenomenological responses is also analyzed. Representative numerical solutions of fracture problems are finally presented.
The paper is devoted to present the Continuum Strong Discontinuity Approach (CSDA) and to examine its capabilities for modeling cracking of concrete. After introducing the main ingredients of the CSDA, an isotropic continuum damage model, which distinguishes tension and compression states, is used to implicitly induce a projected traction separation-law that rules the cracking phenomena. Criteria for onset and propagation of material failure and specific finite elements with embedded discontinuities are also briefly sketched. Finally, some representative numerical simulations of cracking, in plain and reinforced concrete specimens, using the CSDA are presented.
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