Fracture Mechanics
Fracture Mechanics
Fracture Mechanics
Griffith theory
Strain Energy Release rate
Definition: The rate of transfer of energy from the elastic stress field of the
cracked structure to the inelastic process of crack extension.
Critical value of it that makes the crack to propagate to fracture is called
Fracture Toughness of the material.
W
6WL
max = BH2
B = beam thickness
W
6WL
K = 1.12max a = BH2 a
a Failure occurs when K > KIc
H
BH2 KIc
L to prevent failure W < 6L
1.12 a
Strength of Materials vis--vis Fracture Mechanics II
KIc 2h KIc
Safe operating stress : h = Safe operating pressure : p= D
1.12 a 1.12 a
2
1 KIc
Max. allowable crack size under this pressure : a=
(1.12)2 YS
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Regimes of Fracture Mechanics
1 Elastic Plastic
Linear Elastic
Fracture Fracture
M echanics Regime M echanics
Regime
Kapp
Kcrit
Engineering General
Design Yield
Regime Behaviour
0
0 Applied S tress 1
Yield S tress
Regimes of Fracture Mechanics
1 Elastic Plastic
Linear Elastic
Fracture
M echanics Regime
Fracture
M echanics Plastic Zone
Regime
Kapp
Kcrit
LEFM
Engineering General
Design Yield
Regime Behaviour
0
0 Applied S tress 1
Yield S tress
GYFM EPFM
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+0.1
2 Holes, dia = 12.5
-0.0
37.5
25
45o
10
62.5
50
60
C
L
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Fracture Mechanics Specimens
V PQ
KQ = PQ.G.f(a/W)
V
ASTM E1820
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The force PQ is then defined as follows: if the force at every point on the record that
precedes P5 is lower than P5, then P5 is PQ (Fig. A5.1, Type I); if, however, there is a
maximum force preceding P5 that exceeds it, then this maximum force is PQ (Fig. A5.1,
Types II and III).
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ASTM E1820
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Stress intensity factor
(a>r>)
Stress distribution at the crack tip for an elastic solid:
As per Irwin, Stress intensity factor Model for equations for stresses at a point near a crack
K:
Then,
Now, for =0
(directly
ahed of crack
tip):
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Dugdale-BCS model
(Strip Yield Model)
Plastic zone spreads out at ends of crack forming
narrow strips of length R.
Plastic zone
From this: ys
ys
Which simplifies to:
2
K
R I
8 ys c R
Essentially the same as Irwins
D.S. Dugdale, Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of
result bc. /8 1/ Solids,
Volume 8, Issue 2, May 1960, Pages 100-104
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Fracture Behaviour of Ductile &
Brittle Materials
50
40
Load, kN
30
20
10
Ductile
Brittle
0
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0
Crack opening displacement, mm
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Jintegral
Nonlinear elastic materials present nonlinear stress-strain relationships even at infinitesimal
strains
Example: Rubber, biological tissues, Liquid Crystal Elastomers Weakly cross linked liquid
crystal polymers, Glasses with orientational order
Rice's analysis, which assumes nonlinear elastic (or monotonic deformation theory
Plastic) deformation ahead of the crack tip, is designated the J integral.
This analysis is limited to situations where plastic deformation at the crack tip does
not extend to the furthest edge of the loaded part.
It also demands that the assumed nonlinear elastic behaviour of the material is a
reasonable approximation in shape and magnitude to the real material's load response.
Wiki
J Integral and strain energy release rate
Rice showed that the J integral is a pathindependent line integral and it represents
the strain energy release rate of nonlinear elastic materials.
where
is the potential energy, the strain energy U stored in the body minus the work W
done by external forces and A is the crack area.
The dimension of J :
J-integral: Interpretation
Interpretation: Potential energy difference between two identically loaded
specimens w/ different crack lengths
The value of J (obtained under elastic-plastic conditions) is numerically equal to the strain-
energy release rate (obtained under elastic conditions).
B is the
In the tensile mode we can use JIc the specimen
same way as GIc and KIc thickness
(i.e., when J = JIc fracture occurs).
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Load, kN
20
10
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Load-line Displacement, mm
Load-line Displacement
Time
40
30
Load, kN
Load, P
20
10
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Load-line Displacement, mm
Displacement, V
V
Compliance =
P
1
u=
EBV
+1
P
a
= Co+ C1 u + C2 u2 + C3 u3 + C4 u4 + C5 u5
W
40
30
crack length
Load, kN
J-integral
20
10
1200
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1000
Load-line Displacement, mm
800
J (kJ/m )
2
600
K2 (1-2)
J = Jel + Jpl Jel =
400 E
200
800
post-blunting data points
JQ Offset blunting line and
J (kJ/m )
600
determine JQ at
2
400
Ji intersection with power
law curve
200
Determine Ji at
0 intersection of blunting
line with power law curve
10.0 10.2 10.4 10.6 10.8 11.0 11.2 11.4
crack length a (mm)
Calculate Tmat from
slope of power law fit at
given crack extension
1200
1000
800 JQ
J (kJ/m )
600
22
Ji
0.6 JQ
400
aoq
200
0.2 JQ
0
0.0
10.0 0.2
10.2 0.4
10.4 0.6
10.6 0.8
10.8 1.0
11.0 1.2
11.2 1.4
11.4
alength
crack (mm) a (mm)
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Crack growth resistance curve (R-curve) method: Introduction
Fracture resistance of a material under plane strain conditions with small-
scale crack-tip plasticity is described by the critical stress intensity factor
KIc
Under such conditions, fracture of the material is sudden, and there is
either no, or very little, crack growth before final instability
R
plane strain, gross elastic behaviour
Materials can be ascribed singular
G(1) fracture resistance parameters
G, R
G(2)
Materials fracture resistance must
be characterised through range of
crack driving force G(1)
a
R-Curve
The graphical representation of the variation of R, or the critical stress
intensity factor K plotted against crack extension, is called the crack
growth resistance curve (R-curve).
The points of intersection of the G- and R-curves refer to stable crack growth. Stable
crack growth continues up to the point P at which the G(a, a,)-curve, that corresponds to
the value a, of the applied stress, is tangent to the R-curve
R-Curve: Brittle Vs Ductile material
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