scholarly journals The Penny-Shaped Crack and the Plane Strain Crack in an Infinite Body of Power-Law Material

1981 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 830-840 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Y. He ◽  
J. W. Hutchinson

A study is carried out of the problem of a penny-shaped crack in an infinite body of power-law material subject to general remote axisymmetric stressing conditions. The plane strain version of the problem is also examined. The material is incompressible and is characterized by small strain deformation theory with a pure power relation between stress and strain. The solutions presented also apply to power-law creeping materials and to a class of strain-rate sensitive hardening materials. Both numerical and analytical procedures are employed to obtain the main results. A perturbation solution obtained by expanding about the trivial state in which the stress is everywhere parallel to the crack leads to simple formulas which are highly accurate even when the remote stress is perpendicular to the crack.

Simple criteria for brittle and ductile crack extension are applied to the stress and strain fields adjacent to the tip of a crack. They are applied at a specified distance from the crack tip, which should be related to the material’s microstructure. The basic approach is to examine each criterion and find which is satisfied first, as the external loading is increased; the predicted fracture is classified either brittle or ductile accordingly. The stress and strain fields depend upon temperature, principally through the variation of flow stress σ 0 with temperature and, to avoid excessive computation, a constitutive relation is constructed which allows stresses and strains both to be scaled in terms of σ 0 , so that major computations need to be done only at a reference temperature, for a range of applied loads. For any given crack configuration, the result of the calculation is a theoretical prediction of fracture toughness as a function of temperature. At low temperatures, the fracture toughness is low and rises rapidly with temperature, corresponding to satisfaction of the criterion for brittle failure. Above a transition temperature, T T , the ductile criterion is satisfied first, and the toughness variation thereafter falls slowly as temperature increases, corresponding to failure ‘on the upper shelf’. Both the absolute level of the toughness at a given temperature and the transition temperature T T are sensitive to crack size as well as specimen geometry. Although this is self-evident for cracks of microstructural dimensions, the striking feature of this work is the prediction that substantial sensitivity to size and geometry may well be displayed for cracks as large as 1 cm in materials of significance for major engineering structures. Generally, toughness increases and transition temperature decreases as crack size decreases, but these beneficial effects can be nullified by stress triaxiality. Detailed calculations are performed for a buried crack and an edge crack under conditions of plane strain and for a penny-shaped crack loaded axisymmetrically. The plane strain calculations are supplemented by ‘boundary layer’ calculations, in which the effect of specimen geometry appears through a single parameter. The close agreement of the ‘boundary layer’ calculations with the full specimen calculations offers the prospect of a simple characterization of specimen geometry and loading, without the need for geometry-specific computations. The calculations that are reported are, of course, based upon a particular model, chosen in part for com­putational convenience. Thus, their status is that they display possible trends which may be considered to merit further investigation, both theoretical and experimental.


1986 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. F. Shih ◽  
J. W. Hutchinson

Complete, accurate numerical results are given for the solution to the problem of a semi-infinite crack aligned perpendicularly to the free-edge of a semi-infinite half space in which the ligament is subject to arbitrary combinations of bending and tension or compression. The material is an incompressible, pure power-law deformation theory solid. Conditions of plane strain are assumed. Approximate solutions are proposed for predominantly bending loadings and also for predominantly stretching loadings.


1988 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 361-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Duva

The singular behavior of the stress and strain fields at the apex of a square rigid wedge embedded in a nonlinear material under plane-strain conditions is described. Both a power law and a bilinear law for the nonlinear material are considered.


2006 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 55-62
Author(s):  
Tae Soon Kim ◽  
Jai Hak Park ◽  
June Soo Park ◽  
Jong Sung Kim ◽  
Tae Eun Jin

In order to simulate the growth of arbitrarily shaped three-dimensional cracks, the finite element alternating method is extended. As the required solution for a crack in an infinite body, the symmetric Galerkin boundary element method formulated by Li and Mear is used. In the study, a crack is modeled as distribution of displacement discontinuities, and the governing equation is formulated as singularity-reduced integral equations. With the proposed method several example problems, such as a penny-shaped crack, an elliptical crack in an infinite solid and a semi-elliptical surface crack in an elbow are solved. And their growth under fatigue loading is also considered and the accuracy and efficiency of the method are demonstrated.


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