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Material Point Method Simulations of Fragmenting Cylinders. Biswajit Banerjee Department of Mechanical Engineering University of Utah 17th ASCE Engineering Mechanics Conference, 2004. Outline. Scenario Material Point Method (MPM) Approach Validation Simulations of fragmentation.
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Material Point Method Simulations of Fragmenting Cylinders Biswajit Banerjee Department of Mechanical Engineering University of Utah 17th ASCE Engineering Mechanics Conference, 2004
Outline • Scenario • Material Point Method (MPM) • Approach • Validation • Simulations of fragmentation
Simulation Requirements • Fire-container interaction • Large deformations • Strain-rate/temperature dependence • Failure due to void growth/shear bands
Tightly-coupled fluid-structure interaction. No mesh entanglement. Convenient contact framework. Mesh generation trivial. Easily parallelized. No tensile instabilities. First-order accuracy. High particle density for tension dominated problems. Computationally more expensive than FEM. Why MPM ? Advantages Disadvantages
Stress update • Hypoelastic-plastic material • Corotational formulation (Maudlin & Schiferl,1996) • Semi-implicit (Nemat-Nasser & Chung, 1992) • Stress tensor split into isotropic/deviatoric • Radial return plasticity • State dependent elastic moduli, melting temperature
Plasticity modeling • Isotropic stress using Mie-Gruneisen Equation of State. • Deviatoric stress : • Flow stress : Johnson-Cook, Mechanical Threshold Stress, Steinberg-Cochran-Guinan • Yield function : von Mises, Gurson-Tvergaard-Needleman, Rousselier • Temperature rise due to plastic dissipation • Associated flow rule
Damage/Failure modeling • Damage models: • Void nucleation/growth (strain-based) • Porosity evolution (strain-based) • Scalar damage evolution: Johnson-Cook/Hancock-MacKenzie • Failure • Melt temperature exceeded • Modified TEPLA model (Addessio and Johnson, 1988) • Drucker stability postulate • Loss of hyperbolicity (Acoustic tensor)
Fracture Simulation • Particle mass is removed. • Particle stress is set to zero. • Particle converted into a new material that interacts with the rest of the body via contact.
Validation: Plasticity Models 635 K 194 m/s 718 K 188 m/s JC MTS SCG JC MTS SCG 655 K 354 m/s 727 K 211 m/s 6061-T6 Aluminum EFC Copper
Validation: Mesh dependence 18,900 cells 151,000 cells 1,200,000 cells OFHC Copper 298 K 177 m/s MTS 11,500 cells 91,800 cells 735,000 cells 6061-T6 Al 655 K 354 m/s JC
Validation: Penetration/Failure 160,000 cells 1,280,000 cells
Validation: 2D Fragmentation JC (steel), ViscoScram (PBX 9501) MTS (steel), ViscoScram (PBX 9501) Gurson-Tvergaard-Needleman yield, Drucker stability, Acoustic tensor, Gaussian porosity, fragments match Grady equation, gases with ICE-CFD code.