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Abstract
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The evaluation of the
temperature produced during adiabatic dissipative processes for a large class of
engineering materials (metals and some polymers) remains a major subject of
interest, notably in the fields of high-speed machining and impact dynamics. The
hypothesis consisting in considering the proportion of plastic work dissipated as heat
(quantified by the inelastic heat fraction β) as independent on the loading path is
now recognized as highly simplistic. Experimental investigations have shown indeed
the dependence of the inelastic heat fraction on strain, strain rate and the
temperature itself. The theoretical studies available nowadays are not entirely
conclusive on various features regarding the history dependence and the evolution of
β. The present work attempts to provide a systematic approach to the temperature
rise and the inelastic heat fraction evolution for a general loading within
the framework of thermoelastic/viscoplastic standard modelling including a
number of quantitative variants regarding strain hardening/thermal softening
and thermomechanical coupling description. The theoretical results thus
obtained are confronted with experimental data from the literature. An
analysis of the effects of various model simplifications on the evaluation of
temperature growth with regard to conditions for dynamic plastic localization
occurrence is also carried out. It is shown that the value of critical shear strain at
localization incipience is strongly dependent on the level of simplification
admitted.
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Keywords
thermomechanics, viscoplasticity,
inelastic heat fraction, nonlinear modelling, dynamics,
localization
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Milestones
Received: 17 December 2007
Revised: 29 May 2008
Accepted: 19 June 2008
Published: 12 April 2009
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