We extend EUCLID, a computational strategy for automated material model discovery and identification, to linear viscoelasticity. For this case, we perform a priori model selection by adopting a generalized Maxwell model expressed by a Prony series, and deploy EUCLID for identification. The methodology is based on four ingredients: i. full-field displacement and net force data; ii. a very wide material model library — in our case, a very large number of terms in the Prony series; iii. the linear momentum balance constraint; iv. the sparsity constraint. The devised strategy comprises two stages. Stage 1 relies on sparse regression; it enforces momentum balance on the data and exploits sparsity-promoting regularization to drastically reduce the number of terms in the Prony series and identify the material parameters. Stage 2 relies on k-means clustering; starting from the reduced set of terms from stage 1, it further reduces their number by grouping together Maxwell elements with very close relaxation times and summing the corresponding moduli. Automated procedures are proposed for the choice of the regularization parameter in stage 1 and of the number of clusters in stage 2. The overall strategy is demonstrated on artificial numerical data, both without and with the addition of noise, and shown to efficiently and accurately identify a linear viscoelastic model with five relaxation times across four orders of magnitude, out of a library with several hundreds of terms spanning relaxation times across seven orders of magnitude.
Automated identification of linear viscoelastic constitutive laws with EUCLID / Marino E.; Flaschel M.; Kumar S.; De Lorenzis L.. - In: MECHANICS OF MATERIALS. - ISSN 0167-6636. - ELETTRONICO. - 181:(2023), pp. 104643.0-104643.0. [10.1016/j.mechmat.2023.104643]
Automated identification of linear viscoelastic constitutive laws with EUCLID
Marino E.
;
2023
Abstract
We extend EUCLID, a computational strategy for automated material model discovery and identification, to linear viscoelasticity. For this case, we perform a priori model selection by adopting a generalized Maxwell model expressed by a Prony series, and deploy EUCLID for identification. The methodology is based on four ingredients: i. full-field displacement and net force data; ii. a very wide material model library — in our case, a very large number of terms in the Prony series; iii. the linear momentum balance constraint; iv. the sparsity constraint. The devised strategy comprises two stages. Stage 1 relies on sparse regression; it enforces momentum balance on the data and exploits sparsity-promoting regularization to drastically reduce the number of terms in the Prony series and identify the material parameters. Stage 2 relies on k-means clustering; starting from the reduced set of terms from stage 1, it further reduces their number by grouping together Maxwell elements with very close relaxation times and summing the corresponding moduli. Automated procedures are proposed for the choice of the regularization parameter in stage 1 and of the number of clusters in stage 2. The overall strategy is demonstrated on artificial numerical data, both without and with the addition of noise, and shown to efficiently and accurately identify a linear viscoelastic model with five relaxation times across four orders of magnitude, out of a library with several hundreds of terms spanning relaxation times across seven orders of magnitude.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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