6) CHAPTER 3 15oct2018
6) CHAPTER 3 15oct2018
Chapter 3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N734bwi9kmw
OVERVIEW
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Introduction
o KIC has well defined values for brittle materials
(ceramics, glasses, and brittle polymers).
o In ductile materials a plastic zone develops at the
crack tip. If this is small compared to all dimensions
of the test sample the measurement remains valid; if
not, a more complex characterization is required.
o If the plastic zone size exceeds the sample thickness
the crack does not propagate at all; the sample yields
before it breaks.
o Small scale yeilding is the idea that non-linear effects
such as crack tip plasticity, blunting and micro defects
are contained within the zone characterized by the
linear elastic region. 3
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Role of Material Thickness
KI, represents the level of “stress” at the
tip of the crack and KIC, is the highest
value of KI that a material under very
specific (plane-strain) conditions can
withstand without fracture.
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Plane-Strain and Plane-Stress
When a material with a crack is loaded in
tension, the materials develop plastic strains as
the yield stress is exceeded in the region near
the crack tip.
Material within the crack tip stress field,
situated close to a free surface, can deform
laterally (in the z-direction of the image)
because there can be no stresses normal to the
free surface.
The state of stress tends to biaxial and the
material fractures in a characteristic ductile
manner, with a 45o shear lip being formed at
each free surface. This condition is called
“plane-stress" and it occurs in relatively thin
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bodies where the stress through the thickness
cannot vary appreciably due to the thin section.
Ceramics and glasses (brittle materials) have very high yield strengths, giving them
no way to relieve this stress by plastic flow (Figure 4(a)).
For ductile materials like metals and many polymers the picture is different
(Figure 4(b)). The stress still rises as the crack tip is approached, but at the point
that it exceeds the yield strength the material yields, relieving the stress, and –
except for some work hardening – the stress cannot climb higher than sy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9GbhHFaTmk
Based on the equation, at r = 0 (at the crack tip) sy approaches
infinity. However in practice the stress at the crack tip is limited
to at least the yield strength of the material.
Hence linear elasticity (LEFM) cannot be assumed within a
certain distance of the crack.
This nonlinear region is called “crack tip plastic zone”
KI KI
sy s ys
2r 2rp
Hence
K I2
rp plane stress
2s 2
ys
K I2
rp 1 2 plane strain
2s 2
ys
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Where sys = yield strength
Refer to page 61
Evolution of Plastic Zone Size
For most components the size of the plastic zone is fairly small
but concerns must be raised for the validity of LEFM in the case
of structural steels. In practice the ASTM standard requires
these conditions;
http://school.mech.uwa.edu.au/~dwright/DANotes/fracture/plasticity/plasticity.ht
ml#top
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Example 3.1
A thin plate of steel contains a central through-
thickness flaw of length 16 mm, which is subjected to a
stress of 350 MPa applied perpendicularly to the flaw
plane. The yield stress of the material is 1400 MPa.
http://www.tech.plym.ac.uk/sme/interactive_resources/tutorials/fracturemechanics/StressIntensity/So
lutions/Solution7.htm
Solution
Need 2 simple assumptions – assumption 1- the plate is large
compared to the size of the crack; this allows us to use the simple
infinite plate formula for stress intensity factor, i.e;
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Solution cont’d
rp is small compared with the crack length, a and its effect on K
will be correspondingly small: