TY - JOUR
T1 - A universal statistics-based material inhomogeneity “fingerprint” governing spontaneous adiabatic shear bands in thick-walled cylinders
AU - Huang, Sen
AU - Lian, Yanping
AU - Li, Mingjian
AU - Tang, Tiegang
AU - Liu, Mingtao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Elsevier Ltd. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
PY - 2026/9
Y1 - 2026/9
N2 - It is unclear whether material inhomogeneity plays a significant role in the formation of spontaneous adiabatic shear bands (ASBs) in axisymmetric structures under high-strain-rate loading when property fluctuations are significantly present. The absence of a reliable method for quantifying material inhomogeneity has hindered the understanding of ASBs. This study proposes a universal material inhomogeneity statistics (UMIS) model to quantify material inhomogeneity and establishes an integrated numerical framework for simulating ASB evolution. The UMIS model is defined by three physically measurable statistical descriptors: the amplitude of property fluctuation, the Moran’s index describing spatial autocorrelation, and the characteristic length defining the spatial resolution. A high-density Vickers hardness testing method is introduced to quantify the UMIS descriptors. A probability-driven random placement algorithm, a fracture phase-field finite element method, and a modified Johnson-Cook flow stress model are integrated to reconstruct material inhomogeneity and capture ASB initiation and evolution. The UMIS model and the integrated framework are validated against the thick-walled cylinder (TWC) experiments, showing excellent agreement in overall ASB morphology, local features, and statistical characteristics, and outperforming the conventional random model. The UMIS-based simulations reveal clustering behavior of spontaneous ASBs in terms of length and spacing and clarify how amplitude and spatial autocorrelation govern ASB evolution, serving as a unique “fingerprint” of material inhomogeneity. The results further underscore that material inhomogeneity plays a pivotal role in the transition from spontaneous to forced ASB patterns, while maintaining consistent macroscopic properties. The UMIS model provides an accurate characterization and statistical reconstruction of material inhomogeneity.
AB - It is unclear whether material inhomogeneity plays a significant role in the formation of spontaneous adiabatic shear bands (ASBs) in axisymmetric structures under high-strain-rate loading when property fluctuations are significantly present. The absence of a reliable method for quantifying material inhomogeneity has hindered the understanding of ASBs. This study proposes a universal material inhomogeneity statistics (UMIS) model to quantify material inhomogeneity and establishes an integrated numerical framework for simulating ASB evolution. The UMIS model is defined by three physically measurable statistical descriptors: the amplitude of property fluctuation, the Moran’s index describing spatial autocorrelation, and the characteristic length defining the spatial resolution. A high-density Vickers hardness testing method is introduced to quantify the UMIS descriptors. A probability-driven random placement algorithm, a fracture phase-field finite element method, and a modified Johnson-Cook flow stress model are integrated to reconstruct material inhomogeneity and capture ASB initiation and evolution. The UMIS model and the integrated framework are validated against the thick-walled cylinder (TWC) experiments, showing excellent agreement in overall ASB morphology, local features, and statistical characteristics, and outperforming the conventional random model. The UMIS-based simulations reveal clustering behavior of spontaneous ASBs in terms of length and spacing and clarify how amplitude and spatial autocorrelation govern ASB evolution, serving as a unique “fingerprint” of material inhomogeneity. The results further underscore that material inhomogeneity plays a pivotal role in the transition from spontaneous to forced ASB patterns, while maintaining consistent macroscopic properties. The UMIS model provides an accurate characterization and statistical reconstruction of material inhomogeneity.
KW - Adiabatic shear bands
KW - Material inhomogeneity
KW - Moran’s index
KW - Phase-field theory
KW - Thick-walled cylinders
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105036885108
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijimpeng.2026.105752
DO - 10.1016/j.ijimpeng.2026.105752
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105036885108
SN - 0734-743X
VL - 215
JO - International Journal of Impact Engineering
JF - International Journal of Impact Engineering
M1 - 105752
ER -