Multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials

<p align="justify">In a context of restoration of historical masonry structures, it is crucial to properly estimate the residual strength and the potential structural failure modes in order to assess the safety of buildings. Due to its mesostructure and the quasi-brittle nature of it...

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Main Author: Mercatoris, Benoît C.N.
Other Authors: Bouillard, Philippe
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Universite Libre de Bruxelles 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://theses.ulb.ac.be/ETD-db/collection/available/ULBetd-01052010-173736/
id ndltd-BICfB-oai-ulb.ac.be-ETDULB-ULBetd-01052010-173736
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic multi-scale modelling
thin shells
embedded strong discontinuities
failure coarse graining
computational homogenisation
spellingShingle multi-scale modelling
thin shells
embedded strong discontinuities
failure coarse graining
computational homogenisation
Mercatoris, Benoît C.N.
Multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials
description <p align="justify">In a context of restoration of historical masonry structures, it is crucial to properly estimate the residual strength and the potential structural failure modes in order to assess the safety of buildings. Due to its mesostructure and the quasi-brittle nature of its constituents, masonry presents preferential damage orientations, strongly localised failure modes and damage-induced anisotropy, which are complex to incorporate in structural computations. Furthermore, masonry structures are generally subjected to complex loading processes including both in-plane and out-of-plane loads which considerably influence the potential failure mechanisms. As a consequence, both the membrane and the flexural behaviours of masonry walls have to be taken into account for a proper estimation of the structural stability.</p> <p align="justify">Macrosopic models used in structural computations are based on phenomenological laws including a set of parameters which characterises the average behaviour of the material. These parameters need to be identified through experimental tests, which can become costly due to the complexity of the behaviour particularly when cracks appear. The existing macroscopic models are consequently restricted to particular assumptions. Other models based on a detailed mesoscopic description are used to estimate the strength of masonry and its behaviour with failure. This is motivated by the fact that the behaviour of each constituent is a priori easier to identify than the global structural response. These mesoscopic models can however rapidly become unaffordable in terms of computational cost for the case of large-scale three-dimensional structures.</p> <p align="justify">In order to keep the accuracy of the mesoscopic modelling with a more affordable computational effort for large-scale structures, a multi-scale framework using computational homogenisation is developed to extract the macroscopic constitutive material response from computations performed on a sample of the mesostructure, thereby allowing to bridge the gap between macroscopic and mesoscopic representations. Coarse graining methodologies for the failure of quasi-brittle heterogeneous materials have started to emerge for in-plane problems but remain largely unexplored for shell descriptions. The purpose of this study is to propose a new periodic homogenisation-based multi-scale approach for quasi-brittle thin shell failure.</p> <p align="justify">For the numerical treatment of damage localisation at the structural scale, an embedded strong discontinuity approach is used to represent the collective behaviour of fine-scale cracks using average cohesive zones including mixed cracking modes and presenting evolving orientation related to fine-scale damage evolutions.</p> <p align="justify">A first originality of this research work is the definition and analysis of a criterion based on the homogenisation of a fine-scale modelling to detect localisation in a shell description and determine its evolving orientation. Secondly, an enhanced continuous-discontinuous scale transition incorporating strong embedded discontinuities driven by the damaging mesostructure is proposed for the case of in-plane loaded structures. Finally, this continuous-discontinuous homogenisation scheme is extended to a shell description in order to model the localised behaviour of out-of-plane loaded structures. These multi-scale approaches for failure are applied on typical masonry wall tests and verified against three-dimensional full fine-scale computations in which all the bricks and the joints are discretised.</p>
author2 Bouillard, Philippe
author_facet Bouillard, Philippe
Mercatoris, Benoît C.N.
author Mercatoris, Benoît C.N.
author_sort Mercatoris, Benoît C.N.
title Multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials
title_short Multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials
title_full Multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials
title_fullStr Multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials
title_full_unstemmed Multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials
title_sort multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials
publisher Universite Libre de Bruxelles
publishDate 2010
url http://theses.ulb.ac.be/ETD-db/collection/available/ULBetd-01052010-173736/
work_keys_str_mv AT mercatorisbenoitcn multiscalemodellingofshellfailureforperiodicquasibrittlematerials
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spelling ndltd-BICfB-oai-ulb.ac.be-ETDULB-ULBetd-01052010-1737362013-01-07T15:43:50Z Multi-scale modelling of shell failure for periodic quasi-brittle materials Mercatoris, Benoît C.N. multi-scale modelling thin shells embedded strong discontinuities failure coarse graining computational homogenisation <p align="justify">In a context of restoration of historical masonry structures, it is crucial to properly estimate the residual strength and the potential structural failure modes in order to assess the safety of buildings. Due to its mesostructure and the quasi-brittle nature of its constituents, masonry presents preferential damage orientations, strongly localised failure modes and damage-induced anisotropy, which are complex to incorporate in structural computations. Furthermore, masonry structures are generally subjected to complex loading processes including both in-plane and out-of-plane loads which considerably influence the potential failure mechanisms. As a consequence, both the membrane and the flexural behaviours of masonry walls have to be taken into account for a proper estimation of the structural stability.</p> <p align="justify">Macrosopic models used in structural computations are based on phenomenological laws including a set of parameters which characterises the average behaviour of the material. These parameters need to be identified through experimental tests, which can become costly due to the complexity of the behaviour particularly when cracks appear. The existing macroscopic models are consequently restricted to particular assumptions. Other models based on a detailed mesoscopic description are used to estimate the strength of masonry and its behaviour with failure. This is motivated by the fact that the behaviour of each constituent is a priori easier to identify than the global structural response. These mesoscopic models can however rapidly become unaffordable in terms of computational cost for the case of large-scale three-dimensional structures.</p> <p align="justify">In order to keep the accuracy of the mesoscopic modelling with a more affordable computational effort for large-scale structures, a multi-scale framework using computational homogenisation is developed to extract the macroscopic constitutive material response from computations performed on a sample of the mesostructure, thereby allowing to bridge the gap between macroscopic and mesoscopic representations. Coarse graining methodologies for the failure of quasi-brittle heterogeneous materials have started to emerge for in-plane problems but remain largely unexplored for shell descriptions. The purpose of this study is to propose a new periodic homogenisation-based multi-scale approach for quasi-brittle thin shell failure.</p> <p align="justify">For the numerical treatment of damage localisation at the structural scale, an embedded strong discontinuity approach is used to represent the collective behaviour of fine-scale cracks using average cohesive zones including mixed cracking modes and presenting evolving orientation related to fine-scale damage evolutions.</p> <p align="justify">A first originality of this research work is the definition and analysis of a criterion based on the homogenisation of a fine-scale modelling to detect localisation in a shell description and determine its evolving orientation. Secondly, an enhanced continuous-discontinuous scale transition incorporating strong embedded discontinuities driven by the damaging mesostructure is proposed for the case of in-plane loaded structures. Finally, this continuous-discontinuous homogenisation scheme is extended to a shell description in order to model the localised behaviour of out-of-plane loaded structures. These multi-scale approaches for failure are applied on typical masonry wall tests and verified against three-dimensional full fine-scale computations in which all the bricks and the joints are discretised.</p> Bouillard, Philippe Warzée, Guy Zeman, Jan Collin, Frédéric Massart, Thierry J. Geers, Marc G.D. Universite Libre de Bruxelles 2010-01-04 text application/pdf http://theses.ulb.ac.be/ETD-db/collection/available/ULBetd-01052010-173736/ http://theses.ulb.ac.be/ETD-db/collection/available/ULBetd-01052010-173736/ en unrestricted J'accepte que le texte de la thèse (ci-après l'oeuvre), sous réserve des parties couvertes par la confidentialité, soit publié dans le recueil électronique des thèses ULB. 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