Abstract
This work concerns with two successive modifications of the Lemaitre’s damage model to
meet the requirements of formability prediction for today’s modern steels. The first one is the quasiunilateral
damage evolution which modifies the damage driving force by scaling the elastic energy
release rate due to compressive principal stress components. The second one is the shear modification
by which the damage rate is multiplied by a normalized maximum shear stress dependent factor.
With the assumption of non-rotating principal axes of deformation, proportional strain paths and rigid
plasticity, closed form expressions for the isochronous fracture surfaces are derived for each model
variant and resulting surface plots at various spaces are compared. The findings show that the former
modification not only remedies the pathological reflective symmetry of the fracture surface across
the plane with vanishing stress triaxiality ratio, but also allows hindering fracture under uniaxial
compression. The latter modification by adding a direct Lode parameter dependence to the damage
evolution function allows prediction of premature fracture at generalized shear stress states, a condition
observed for certain advanced high strength metallic sheets. Parameter calibration is realized for
each model variant using the experimental data from the literature. It is shown that the fracture model
with both the shear modification and the quasi-unilateral enhancement shows the best fitting quality.
Finally, the models are implemented as user subroutines for ABAQUS/EXPLICIT and used in prediction
of initiation and propagation of cracks for a series of deep-drawing punch tests. A good agreement
with the outputs reported in the literature is observed in terms of the shear damage occurrence zones
as well as corresponding punch force-displacement diagrams.