NAMTRL-SCILGJan 17, 2025

Surrogate-based multiscale analysis of experiments on thermoplastic composites under off-axis loading

arXiv:2501.10193v12 citationsh-index: 14
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses computational challenges in multiscale simulations for composite materials, offering a more efficient method for researchers and engineers, but it is incremental as it builds on existing surrogate and multiscale techniques.

The paper tackled modeling discrepancies in thermoplastic composites under off-axis loading by developing a surrogate-based multiscale approach using a Physically Recurrent Neural Network, which confirmed macroscopic inhomogeneity and improved agreement with experiments over a single-scale method, though with limited accuracy in creep tests.

In this paper, we present a surrogate-based multiscale approach to model constant strain-rate and creep experiments on unidirectional thermoplastic composites under off-axis loading. In previous contributions, these experiments were modeled through a single-scale micromechanical simulation under the assumption of macroscopic homogeneity. Although efficient and accurate in many scenarios, simulations with low-off axis angles showed significant discrepancies with the experiments. It was hypothesized that the mismatch was caused by macroscopic inhomogeneity, which would require a multiscale approach to capture it. However, full-field multiscale simulations remain computationally prohibitive. To address this issue, we replace the micromodel with a Physically Recurrent Neural Network (PRNN), a surrogate model that combines data-driven components with embedded constitutive models to capture history-dependent behavior naturally. The explainability of the latent space of this network is also explored in a transfer learning strategy that requires no re-training. With the surrogate-based simulations, we confirm the hypothesis raised on the inhomogeneity of the macroscopic strain field and gain insights into the influence of adjustment of the experimental setup with oblique end-tabs. Results from the surrogate-based multiscale approach show better agreement with experiments than the single-scale micromechanical approach over a wide range of settings, although with limited accuracy on the creep experiments, where macroscopic test effects were implicitly taken into account in the material properties calibration.

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