Johnson-Cook plasticity

The Johnson-Cook plasticity model:

  • is a particular type of Mises plasticity model with analytical forms of the hardening law and rate dependence;

  • is suitable for high-strain-rate deformation of many materials, including most metals;

  • is typically used in adiabatic transient dynamic simulations;

  • can be used in conjunction with the Johnson-Cook dynamic failure model in Abaqus/Explicit;

  • can be used in conjunction with the tensile failure model to model tensile spall or a pressure cutoff in Abaqus/Explicit;

  • can be used in conjunction with the progressive damage and failure models (Progressive Damage and Failure) to specify different damage initiation criteria and damage evolution laws that allow for the progressive degradation of the material stiffness and the removal of elements from the mesh; and

  • must be used in conjunction with either the linear elastic material model (Linear elastic behavior) or the equation of state material model (Equation of state).

The following topics are discussed:

Related Topics
Classical metal plasticity
Rate-dependent yield
Equation of state
Progressive Damage and Failure
Dynamic failure models
Annealing or melting
About the material library
Inelastic behavior
In Other Guides
*ANNEAL TEMPERATURE
*PLASTIC
*RATE DEPENDENT
*SHEAR FAILURE
*TENSILE FAILURE
*DAMAGE INITIATION
*DAMAGE EVOLUTION
Using the Johnson-Cook hardening model to define classical metal plasticity

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