Cargando…

Mesomechanical constitutive modeling /

This monograph presents an original concept of constitutive modeling of a wide variety of materials that are microscopically heterogeneous and macroscopically homogeneous. From one point of view it is a generalization of the fictitious classical 'series' and 'parallel' models; th...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Kafka, Vratislav
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Singapore ; River Edge, NJ : World Scientific Pub., 2001.
Colección:Series on advances in mathematics for applied sciences ; v. 55.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Introduction
  • Symbolic notation
  • ch. I. General mesomechanical model ofheterogeneous, statistically homogeneous materials
  • ch. II. Models of materials with statistically isotropic structure. II. 1. General features of the model. II. 2. General model of two-phase materials. II. 3. Discussion of separability of deviatoric and isotropic responses of the mesoscopic stress- and strain-components. II. 4. Demonstrative stress-strain diagrams for two-phase materials. II. 5. Relation between our two-phase model and the exact bounds for macroscopic elastic moduli. II. 6. Confrontation with some theoretical solutions for two-phase materials
  • ch. III. Plasticity of polycrystalline metals. III.l. Small deformations. III. 2. Finite deformations, continuum damage and localization
  • ch. IV. Time-dependent deformation. IV. 1. Application to creep of concrete
  • ch. V. Fracturing. V.1. Quasihomogeneous stable microfracturing. V.2. Localized cracking in concrete
  • ch. VI. Shape memory. VI. 1. Shape memory resulting from heterogeneity on the atomic scale. VI. 2. Pseudoelasticity. VI. 3. One-way shape memory effect. VI. 4. Two-way shape memory effect. VI. 5. Discussion of our model for shape memory
  • ch. VII. Transversely isotropic materials. VII. 1. Transversely isotropic two-phase mode. VII. 2. Transversely isotropic materials with unidirectional continuous fibers
  • ch. VIII. Appendices.