Many of the material models in COMSOL Multiphysics will compute a stress based on an elastic strain. The elastic strain tensor is obtained after removing any inelastic deformation contribution from the total deformation from the displacements. There are several possible inelastic strain contributions:
In the finite deformation case, the inelastic strain is instead removed using a multiplicative decomposition of the deformation gradient tensor. The elastic deformation gradient tensor is the basis for all strain energy formulations in hyperelastic materials, and also for the elastic strain in linear and nonlinear elasticity. It is derived by removing the inelastic deformation from the total deformation gradient tensor.
so the inelastic deformations are removed from the total deformation gradient tensor. The inelastic deformation tensor Finel is derived from inelastic processes, such as thermal expansion or plasticity. When there are several inelastic contributions, they are applied sequentially to obtain the total inelastic deformation tensor
Finel:
The right Cauchy–Green deformation tensor
C is computed from the deformation gradient
F, as well as the
Green–Lagrange strain tensor
ε
The elastic right Cauchy–Green deformation tensor is then computed from
Fel
and the elastic Green–Lagrange strain tensor is computed as
After Equation 3-5, the elastic Green–Lagrange strain depends on the inelastic deformation as
When using multiplicative decomposition of deformation gradients, Hooke’s law for a Linear Elastic Material produces a second Piola–Kirchhoff stress tensor which is linearly related to the elastic Green–Lagrange strain
The plastic Green–Lagrange strain tensor is computed from the
plastic deformation gradient tensor as