PP can draw out forever, elongation values over 500 for unfilled homopolymer are not uncommon. First your true stress/strain curve does not look right to me. I think the slope should be continuous. But the point to consider is what is the loading and how much strain is expected. No point putting in a curve good to 200% if you never go beyond 30% The generic curve from your first plot looks like some kind of hyperelastic/Mooney curve. You will never get the entire range of that with a MISO material model. Also, I think the multilinear curve cannot have a negative slope. So if you're limited to MISO, then you will have to deviate from your curve somewhat. What I do is first determine a reasonable maximum strain. I do this with a bilinear curve with a zero( or at least very low) secant modulus and yield at the approximate average of the stress above 10% strain. This should give a reasonable estimate of maximum strain. Then build your MISO model up to the strain level. Try and keep the area under the MISO curve close the the area under your test data curve. Remember that the area under the stress strain curve is proportional to strain energy density. I think that if the two curves have similar area, the you will get a fairly reasonable estimate of yield. Hope this makes sense.
Rick Fischer
Principal Engineer
Argonne National Laboratory