Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
779259 International Journal of Impact Engineering 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Ballistic phenomena give rise to a plethora of failure modes that compete. Johnson–Cook (JC) plasticity and failure models have been extremely successful because, while being conceptually simple, they capture the essence of the operative mechanics and they provide reasonably good predictions for ballistic limits. Nevertheless, the Johnson–Cook models, due to their isotropic flow and failure surface, cannot reproduce certain failure modes commonly seen in quasistatic tests: cup and cone failure, slanted failure in tensile specimens, and slanted failure in compression specimens. This work shows that by introducing the third invariant (or Lode angle) in both the JC plasticity and damage models, cup and cone, and slanted failure modes arise naturally. After the model is presented it is exercised with a material taken from the literature to predict successfully Taylor anvil and ballistic penetration failure patterns.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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