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Creators/Authors contains: "Mora, Carlos"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
  2. Abstract Fracture modeling of metallic alloys with microscopic pores relies on multiscale damage simulations which typically ignore the manufacturing-induced spatial variabilities in porosity. This simplification is made because of the prohibitive computational expenses of explicitly modeling spatially varying microstructures in a macroscopic part. To address this challenge and open the doors for the fracture-aware design of multiscale materials, we propose a data-driven framework that integrates a mechanistic reduced-order model (ROM) with a calibration scheme based on random processes. Our ROM drastically accelerates direct numerical simulations (DNS) by using a stabilized damage algorithm and systematically reducing the degrees of freedom via clustering. Since clustering affects local strain fields and hence the fracture response, we calibrate the ROM by constructing a multifidelity random process based on latent map Gaussian processes (LMGPs). In particular, we use LMGPs to calibrate the damage parameters of an ROM as a function of microstructure and clustering (i.e., fidelity) level such that the ROM faithfully surrogates DNS. We demonstrate the application of our framework in predicting the damage behavior of a multiscale metallic component with spatially varying porosity. Our results indicate that microstructural porosity can significantly affect the performance of macro-components and hence must be considered in the design process. 
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  3. Predicting the fracture behavior of macroscale components containing microscopic porosity relies on multiscale damage models which typically ignore the manufacturing-induced spatial variabilities in porosity. This simplification is made due to the prohibitive computational costs associated with explicitly modeling spatially varying microstructures in a macroscopic component. To address this challenge, we propose a data-driven framework that integrates a mechanistic reduced-order model (ROM) with a calibration scheme based on latent map Gaussian processes (LMGPs). Our ROM drastically accelerates direct numerical simulations (DNS) by using a stabilized damage algorithm and systematically reducing the degrees of freedom via clustering. Since clustering affects local strain fields and hence the fracture response, we construct a multi-fidelity LMGP to inversely estimate the damage parameters of an ROM as a function of microstructure and clustering level such that the ROM faithfully surrogates DNS. We demonstrate the application of our framework in predicting the damage behavior of a multiscale metallic component with spatially varying porosity. 
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  4. null (Ed.)