Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
864977 Procedia IUTAM 2014 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

During the twentieth century, plasticity, as an example of inelastic deformation of materials, has grown to become a distinct field in solid mechanics. As a research topic it combines material science with mathematical modelling at a hierarchy of length scales, and encompasses dislocations as well as tensorial constitutive equations. Because of its predictive powers in engineering, plasticity models have become a standard ingredient of an engineer's toolbox, but do we really understand what it is? This article looks back at plasticity from a more philosophical point of view with the aim of unraveling the fabric of plasticity. Does the current hierarchy of theories provide a reductionist explanation? Or rather, does it have a multiscale structure that expresses the emergent phenomena that are contained within plasticity? The conclusion of these considerations turns out to be that the challenge is still ahead of us.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Engineering (General)