Polymers (Apr 2019)
Thermomechanical Modeling of Amorphous Glassy Polymer Undergoing Large Viscoplastic Deformation: 3-Points Bending and Gas-Blow Forming
Abstract
Polymeric products are mostly manufactured by warm mechanical processes, wherein large viscoplastic deformation and the thermomechanical coupling effect are highly involved. To capture such intricate behavior of the amorphous glassy polymers, this paper develops a finite-strain and thermomechanically-coupled constitutive model, which is based on a tripartite decomposition of the deformation gradient into elastic, viscoplastic, and thermal components. Constitutive equations are formulated with respect to the spatial configuration in terms of the Eulerian Hencky strain rate and the Jaumann rate of Kirchhoff stress. Hyperelasticity, the viscoplastic flow rule, strain softening and hardening, the criterion for viscoplasticity, and temperature evolution are derived within the finite-strain framework. Experimental data obtained in uniaxial tensile tests and three-point bending tests of polycarbonates are used to validate the numerical efficiency and stability of the model. Finally, the proposed model is used to simulate the gas-blow forming process of a polycarbonate sheet. Simulation results demonstrate well the capability of the model to represent large viscoplastic deformation and the thermomechanical coupling effect of amorphous glassy polymers.
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