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A theory of strain-gradient plasticity for isotropic, plastically irrotational materials. Part I: Small deformations
Authors:Morton E. Gurtin  Lallit Anand
Affiliation:a Department of Mathematical Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA
b Department of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
Abstract:This study develops a small-deformation theory of strain-gradient plasticity for isotropic materials in the absence of plastic rotation. The theory is based on a system of microstresses consistent with a microforce balance; a mechanical version of the second law that includes, via microstresses, work performed during viscoplastic flow; a constitutive theory that allows:
the microstresses to depend on View the MathML source, the gradient of the plastic strain-rate, and
the free energy ψ to depend on the Burgers tensor View the MathML source.
The microforce balance when augmented by constitutive relations for the microstresses results in a nonlocal flow rule in the form of a tensorial second-order partial differential equation for the plastic strain. The microstresses are strictly dissipative when ψ is independent of the Burgers tensor, but when ψ depends on G the gradient microstress is partially energetic, and this, in turn, leads to a back stress and (hence) to Bauschinger-effects in the flow rule. It is further shown that dependencies of the microstresses on View the MathML source lead to strengthening and weakening effects in the flow rule.Typical macroscopic boundary conditions are supplemented by nonstandard microscopic boundary conditions associated with flow, and, as an aid to numerical solutions, a weak (virtual power) formulation of the nonlocal flow rule is derived.
Keywords:Constitutive behavior   Viscoplasticity   Strain-gradient plasticity
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