On the use of a reduced enhanced solid-shell (RESS) element for sheet forming simulations

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A recently proposed reduced enhanced solid-shell (RESS) element [Alves de Sousa, R.J., Cardoso, R.P.R., Fontes Valente, R.A., Yoon, J.W., Gracio, J.J., Natal Jorge, R.M., 2005. A new one-point quadrature enhanced assumed strain (EAS) solid-shell element with multiple integration points along thickness: Part I - Geometrically Linear Applications. International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 62, 952-977; Alves de Sousa, R.J., Cardoso, R.P.R., Fontes Valente, R.A., Yoon, J.W., Gracio, J.J., Natal Jorge, R.M., 2006. A new one-point quadrature enhanced assumed strain (EAS) solid-shell element with multiple integration points along thickness: Part II - Nonlinear Applications. International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 67, 160-188.] is based on the enhanced assumed strain (EAS) method with a one-point quadrature numerical integration scheme. In this work, the RESS element is applied to large-deformation elasto-plastic thin-shell applications, including contact and plastic anisotropy. One of the main advantages of the RESS is its minimum number of enhancing parameters (only one), which when associated with an in-plane reduced integration scheme, circumvents efficiently well-known locking phenomena, leading to a computationally efficient performance when compared to conventional 3D solid elements. It is also worth noting that the element accounts for an arbitrary number of integration points through thickness direction within a single element layer. This capability has proven to be efficient, for instance, for accurately describing springback phenomenon in sheet forming simulations. A physical stabilization procedure is employed in order to correct the element's rank deficiency. A general elasto-plastic model is also incorporated for the constitutive modelling of sheet forming operations with plastic anisotropy. Several examples including contact, anisotropic plasticity and springback effects are carried out and the results are compared with experimental data. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Issue Date
2007
Language
English
Article Type
Article; Proceedings Paper
Keywords

INCREMENTAL DEFORMATION-THEORY; MULTIPLE INTEGRATION POINTS; ANISOTROPIC YIELD FUNCTIONS; ALUMINUM-ALLOY SHEETS; FINITE-ELEMENT; STABILIZATION TECHNIQUE; NONLINEAR APPLICATIONS; INCOMPATIBLE MODES; FORMULATION; ELASTICITY

Citation

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLASTICITY, v.23, no.3, pp.490 - 515

ISSN
0749-6419
DOI
10.1016/j.ijplas.2006.06.004
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/203801
Appears in Collection
ME-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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