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Fracture toughness

About: Fracture toughness is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 39642 publications have been published within this topic receiving 854338 citations.


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TL;DR: In this article, a potential function of the components of the crack face displacements is used to generate the tractions along the interface where the fracture processes causing separation occur, and the two main parameters characterizing this potential are the work of separation per unit area and a peak normal stress.
Abstract: Calculations are reported for the mixed mode toughness of an interface joining an elastic-plastic solid to a solid which does not yield plastically. A potential function of the components of the crack face displacements is used to generate the tractions along the interface where the fracture processes causing separation occur. The two main parameters characterizing this potential are the work of separation per unit area and a peak normal stress. This description of the interface separation process is embedded within the continuum description as a boundary condition on the interface linking the adjoining solids. Small-scale yielding in plane strain is considered with the remote field specified by the magnitude and phase of the mixed mode stress intensity factors. Crack growth resistance curves are computed for a range of the most important nondimensional material parameters and for various combinations of remote mixed mode loading. Particular emphasis is placed on the ratio of the steady-state interface toughness to the “intrinsic” work of separation as it depends on plastic yielding and on the combination of modes 1 and 2. Plasticity enhances the interface toughness for all modes of loading, but substantially more so in the presence of a significant mode 2 component of loading than in near-mode 1 conditions.

675 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the dynamics of lateral crack propagation in a sharp-indenter contact field and derived an expression for equilibrium crack evolution with due allowance for the close proximity of crack plane and specimen free surface.
Abstract: The mechanics of lateral crack propagation in a sharp-indenter contact field are described. The driving force for fracture has its origin in the residual component of the elastic/plastic field, which becomes dominant as the indenter is unloaded. Expressions for equilibrium crack evolution are derived, with due allowance for the close proximity of crack plane and specimen free surface. As with the median/radial crack system considered in an earlier paper, the ratio hardness-to-modulus complements toughness in the fracture relations. The basic predictions of the theory are examined in terms of experimental measurements of lateral crack dimensions in materials with a wide range of mechanical properties. The prospects of predicting the extent of lateral fracture in other ceramics, and thence of establishing a base for analyzing such important practical properties as surface erosion, are discussed.

665 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the first overview of failure of metals is presented, focusing on brittle and ductile failure under monotonic loadings, where the focus is on linking microstructure, physical mechanisms and overall fracture properties.

639 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023972
20222,107
20211,361
20201,324
20191,383
20181,305