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Localisation in computational geomechanics: a nonlinear micropolar approach [dataset] Open Access

The localisation of strain into narrow bands of intense deformations is a pervasive phenomenon in geomechanics. It is closely associated with catastrophic failure - landslides, slope collapses, rock faulting, etc. - and has significant implications for the design, integrity, and risk assessment of geotechnical infrastructure. However, traditional computational modelling techniques cannot capture localised failure in a rigorous or reliable way. Classical continuum theories overlook microstructural effects, including those responsible for triggering and governing localisation processes, and mesh-based approaches like the finite element method typically break down under the large deformations induced by geotechnical failure. This thesis addresses these challenges by employing the generalised implicit material point method, which discretises the domain using particles to circumvent mesh tangling, and by developing a geometrically-nonlinear elastoplastic micropolar (Cosserat) continuum formulation. This nonlocal theory enriches the classical theory with a field of independent microrotations to represent the relative motion of individual soil particles, as well as internal length scales indicative of particle size. Consequently, localised shear bands emerge naturally and analyses converge to physically meaningful results. First, strain localisation is introduced as an engineering phenomenon and an analytical subject. This is followed by an outline of the material point method, a classical formulation of which is used to demonstrate its deficiencies in simulating localised failure. To address these shortcomings, a review of existing regularisation approaches is provided, leading to the derivation and implementation of the proposed micropolar continuum - initially for purely hyperelastic material behaviour, before extending the model to elastoplasticity. Numerical examples - encompassing a biaxial test and a column collapse problem - demonstrate the method’s capacity to capture complex, evolving failure mechanisms in a robust, convergent, and physically realistic manner. Finally, the analytical consistent linearisation required for the Newton–Raphson solution algorithm is presented in detail in the appendices.

Descriptions

Resource type
Dataset
Contributors
Creator: O'Hare, Ted 1
1 Durham University, UK
Funder
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Research methods
Other description
Keyword
strain localisation
micropolar
Cosserat
material point method
large deformation
hyperplasticity
Subject
Soil mechanics--Computer programs
Material point method
Location
Language
Cited in
https://etheses.dur.ac.uk/16144/
Identifier
ark:/32150/r2kw52j812k
doi:10.15128/r2kw52j812k
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY)

Publisher
Durham University
Date Created

File Details

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T.J. O'hare
Date Uploaded
Date Modified
24 June 2025, 11:06:01
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File format: zip (ZIP Format)
Mime type: application/zip
File size: 13139662
Last modified: 2025:06:23 16:44:47+01:00
Filename: research data.zip
Original checksum: 4edd4d2982879397c78c8f1312192a0c
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User N. Syrotiuk has updated Localisation in computational geomechanics: a nonlinear micropolar approach [dataset] 14 days ago
User N. Syrotiuk has updated Localisation in computational geomechanics: a nonlinear micropolar approach [dataset] 14 days ago
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User T.J. O'hare has updated Localisation in computational geomechanics: a nonlinear micropolar approach [dataset] 14 days ago
User T.J. O'hare has updated Localisation in computational geomechanics: a nonlinear micropolar approach [dataset] 14 days ago
User T.J. O'hare has updated Localisation in computational geomechanics: a nonlinear micropolar approach [dataset] 14 days ago
User T.J. O'hare has deposited research data.zip 14 days ago