Ductile fracture of aluminum 2024-T351 under proportional and non-proportional multi-axial loading: Bao-Wierzbicki results revisited

Jessica Papasidero, Véronique Doquet, Dirk Mohr

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The effect of stress state and loading path on the ductile fracture of aluminum 2024-T351 is characterized through tension-torsion experiments on tubular specimens. The experimental program includes proportional and non-proportional loading paths leading to the onset of fracture at nearly plane stress conditions at stress triaxialities between 0 and 0.6. Stereo digital image correlation is used to measure the displacements and rotations applied to the specimen shoulders. An isotropic non-quadratic Hosford plasticity model with combined Voce-Swift hardening is used to obtain estimates of the local stress and strain fields within the specimen gage section. The hybrid experimental-numerical results indicate a higher strain to fracture for pure shear than for uniaxial tension. The calibration of a Hosford-Coulomb fracture initiation model suggests that the ductility of aluminum 2024-T351 decreases monotonically as a function of the stress triaxiality, whereas it is a non-symmetric convex function of the Lode angle parameter. It is shown that a simple non-linear damage accumulation rule can describe the effect of non-proportional loading on the strain to fracture.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)459-474
Number of pages16
JournalInternational Journal of Solids and Structures
Volume69-70
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Ductile fracture
  • Lode angle
  • Non-proportional loading
  • Stress triaxiality
  • Tension-torsion

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