Abstract |
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To facilitate the design and application of
porous titanium and titanium foam, numerical simulation of their
mechanical behavior is essential. The concept of a representative
volume element (RVE) is essential to obtain accurate estimates of
the properties. Because of the high contrast between the
properties of the two phases (pore vs. matrix), it is impractical
to obtain a single RVE independent of boundary conditions to
provide accurate predictions. We suggest that a set of small
domain RVEs can be used instead, as long as the average of the
small domains provides a convergent result. Two mixed boundary
conditions simulating uniaxial proportional loading were designed
and implemented on several 2D and 3D finite element models
at different length scales, that is, containing
different numbers of pores. The two boundary conditions
provide opposite biased responses. Convergence of both the
macroscopic and the microscopic elastoplastic responses
associated with the boundary conditions is demonstrated here. By
this approach, RVEs that are prohibitively large according to
Hill’s definition are divided into reasonably small
ones associated with special boundary conditions, and the error
of predictions associated with model size can be estimated.
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Keywords
representative volume element, titanium foam, microstructure, finite element, boundary condition
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Authors
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