Civil Engineering Departmental Seminar - Learning the hyperelastic constitutive relations from full-field data

10:00am - 11:00am
Room 3574 (Lift 27/28), Civil Engineering Conference Room, HKUST

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Learning the hyperelastic constitutive relations from full-field data

Machine learning (ML)-based constitutive models have significantly enhanced the capacity to characterize the complex constitutive relations of materials, such as polycrystals, soft materials, etc. However, constructing such ML-based constitutive models, with the correct physical constraints remains a challenge, especially from experimentally measurable data. In this work, we propose a physical-augmented neural network (PANN) constitutive model that satisfies the objectivity, material symmetry (isotropic), polyconvexity, growth condition and stress-free condition by construction. With all these constraints in place, a hybrid finite element method-neural network (FEM-NN) optimization framework was developed to calibrate the PENN model based on the full-field displacement and external load data. Numerical and experimental data from isotropic hyperelastic materials were used to test the performance of the PANN model. Only a single uniaxial test is required for generating the training data. Results show that the PENN architecture can identify the unknown constitutive relationships of real-world materials with high accuracy and efficiency. The methods in this work is general and can be extended to a wide class of materials.

Event Format
Speakers / Performers:
Prof. Sheng Mao
Peking University

Sheng Mao received his B.S. degree in Theoretical and Applied Mechanics from Peking University in 2011 and Ph.D. degree in Applied Mechanics from University of Pennsylvania in 2016. He then worked as a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Princeton University until 2020 when he joined Peking University as an Assistant Professor. His research interest mainly lies in the mechanics and physics of soft materials, multiscale methods, constitutive modelling and computational mechanics. 

Language
English
Recommended For
Faculty and staff
PG students
Organizer
Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering
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