4.7 Article

Simulating the pervasive fracture of materials and structures using randomly close packed Voronoi tessellations

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL MECHANICS
Volume 44, Issue 4, Pages 455-471

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00466-009-0383-6

Keywords

Voronoi; Finite element; Fracture; Fragmentation; Cohesive crack; Sensitivity to initial conditions; Probabilistic

Funding

  1. University of Califorina at Davis

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Under extreme loading conditions most often the extent of material and structural fracture is pervasive in the sense that a multitude of cracks are nucleating, propagating in arbitrary directions, coalescing, and branching. Pervasive fracture is a highly nonlinear process involving complex material constitutive behavior, material softening, localization, surface generation, and ubiquitous contact. A pure Lagrangian computational method based on randomly close packed Voronoi tessellations is proposed as a rational and robust approach for simulating the pervasive fracture of materials and structures. Each Voronoi cell is formulated as a finite element using the Reproducing Kernel Method. Fracture surfaces are allowed to nucleate only at the intercell faces, and cohesive tractions are dynamically inserted. The randomly seeded Voronoi cells provide a regularized random network for representing fracture surfaces. Example problems are used to demonstrate the proposed numerical method. The primary numerical challenge for this class of problems is the demonstration of model objectivity and, in particular, the identification and demonstration of a measure of convergence for engineering quantities of interest.

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