Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6748244 | International Journal of Solids and Structures | 2018 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
A stress-gradient material model was recently proposed by Forest and Sab (Mech. Res. Comm.40, 16-25, 2012) as an alternative to the well-known strain-gradient model introduced in the mid 60s. We propose a theoretical framework for the homogenization of stress-gradient materials. We derive suitable boundary conditions ensuring that Hill-Mandel's lemma holds. As a first result, we show that stress-gradient materials exhibit a softening size-effect (to be defined more precisely in this paper), while strain-gradient materials exhibit a stiffening size-effect. This demonstrates that the stress-gradient and strain-gradient models are not equivalent as intuition would have it, but rather complementary. Using the solution to Eshelby's spherical inhomogeneity problem that we derive in this paper, we propose Mori-Tanaka estimates of the effective properties of stress-gradient composites with spherical inclusions, thus opening the way to more advanced multi-scale analyses of stress-gradient materials.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Civil and Structural Engineering
Authors
V.P. Tran, S. Brisard, J. Guilleminot, K. Sab,