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March 5, 2019 at 7:35 pm
karun00162
SubscriberHello,
I am using multi-linear material property for TPU (thermoplastic polyurethane) polymer up to 70% of strain. As stress-strain curve for TPU is non-linear after 10% strain, I used Linear elastic (Isotropic elasticity) and Plasticity (Multilinear Isotropic hardening). Would this be correct ? as I do not need to use hyper-elastic models due to some constraints. I used Young's modulus of 20 MPa and Poisson's ratio 0.48.Â
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March 9, 2019 at 3:12 am
Bhargava Sista
Ansys EmployeeThermoplastics are challenging to model as they tend to have nonlinear elastic behavior followed by compressible plastic deformation. There are no off-the-shelf material models for such behavior but depending on the application, one may use multilinear plasticity models (which are meant for metal plasticity). However, make note of one major limitation: the plastic deformation in metals is incompressible which is not the case in thermoplastics. This may not be a problem at moderate deformation but at very large deformations you may start seeing that the material becomes unstable (force reaction drops upon further loading).Â
To make the long story short: yes, you can use the multilinear plasticity model for thermoplastics but do verify the results especially at large strains.
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March 10, 2019 at 4:44 pm
karun00162
SubscriberThank youÂ
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March 21, 2019 at 5:53 pm
karun00162
SubscriberHello sir,
I am trying to study interface crack fracture toughness between linear elastic (material 1) and non-linear elastic (material 2).Â
Well, using multilinear isotropic hardening material model (for material 2) gives higher J-integral values but using bilinear isotropic hardening does give lower and expected J-integral values. As J-integral can be used or approximated for non-linear elastic models, then would bilinear isotropic hardening model would be the right fit for material 2 ?
The doubt I am having is that as bilinear isotropic hardening model asks for Yield strength and Tangent modulus, in actual stress-strain graph of material 2, no yielding occurs up to 100% strain (and the actual whole part is also below 100% strain). I am just curious to know that how does this bilinear isotropic hardening material model interpret J-integral values ?
Thanks.
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July 28, 2023 at 7:45 am
SK Abdul Alim
SubscriberHi, I am a newbie working on Ansys. I am also trying to add TPU as material. Can you please tell me how you did it?
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