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Stress concentration

About: Stress concentration is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 23250 publications have been published within this topic receiving 422911 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the energy of a persistent slip band (PSB) is monitored and an energy balance approach is taken, in which cracks initiate and the material fails due to stress concentration from a PSB (with respect to dislocation motion).

200 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of stress cycle asymmetry on fatigue crack rate and on the conditions for a crack not to propagate was studied on sheet steel specimens with a sharp central notch.

200 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
30 Oct 2008-Nature
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate low-speed fracture instabilities in silicon using quantum-mechanical hybrid, multi-scale modelling and single-crystal fracture experiments and find that beyond the very tip of the crack, when fracture speed is slow enough, bonds are broken one atomic layer below the fracture plane leading to a systematic downward deflection of a crack.
Abstract: Multiscale models predict detailed features of surfaces left by crack propagation and rationalize the occurrence of fracture instabilities in a technologically important material, silicon. As a crack propagates along the most stable cleavage plane in silicon at relatively low speeds (800 metres per second), an instability suddenly appears. The authors find that beyond the very tip of the crack, when fracture speed is slow enough, bonds are broken one atomic layer below the fracture plane leading to a systematic downward deflection of the crack. Conversely, deflecting of fracture on another cleavage plane of silicon occur when the fracture speed is very high. Preliminary simulations reveal that similar instabilities could occur in diamond and silicon carbide. When a brittle material is loaded to the limit of its strength, it fails by the nucleation and propagation of a crack1. The conditions for crack propagation are created by stress concentration in the region of the crack tip and depend on macroscopic parameters such as the geometry and dimensions of the specimen2. The way the crack propagates, however, is entirely determined by atomic-scale phenomena, because brittle crack tips are atomically sharp and propagate by breaking the variously oriented interatomic bonds, one at a time, at each point of the moving crack front1,3. The physical interplay of multiple length scales makes brittle fracture a complex ‘multi-scale’ phenomenon. Several intermediate scales may arise in more complex situations, for example in the presence of microdefects or grain boundaries. The occurrence of various instabilities in crack propagation at very high speeds is well known1, and significant advances have been made recently in understanding their origin4,5. Here we investigate low-speed propagation instabilities in silicon using quantum-mechanical hybrid, multi-scale modelling and single-crystal fracture experiments. Our simulations predict a crack-tip reconstruction that makes low-speed crack propagation unstable on the (111) cleavage plane, which is conventionally thought of as the most stable cleavage plane. We perform experiments in which this instability is observed at a range of low speeds, using an experimental technique designed for the investigation of fracture under low tensile loads. Further simulations explain why, conversely, at moderately high speeds crack propagation on the (110) cleavage plane becomes unstable and deflects onto (111) planes, as previously observed experimentally6,7.

199 citations

01 Apr 1965
TL;DR: In this article, the strength characteristics of quasi-homogeneous, nonisotropic materials are derived from a generalized distortional work criterion, and a method of strength analysis of laminated composites is delineated using glass-epoxy composites as examples.
Abstract: : The strength characteristics of quasi-homogeneous, nonisotropic materials are derived from a generalized distortional work criterion. For unidirectional composites, the strength is governed by the axial, transverse, and shear strengths, and the angle of fiber orientation. The strength of a laminated composite consisting of layers of uni-directional composites depends on the strength, thickness, and orientation of each constituent layer and the temperature at which the laminate is cured. In the process of lamination, thermal and mechanical interactions are induced which affect the residual stress and the subsequent stress distribution under external load. A method of strength analysis of laminated composites is delineated using glass-epoxy composites as examples. The validity of the method is demonstrated by appropriate experiments. Commonly encountered material constants and coefficients for stress and strength analyses for glass-epoxy composites are listed in the Appendix.

199 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
M. Huang1
TL;DR: In this paper, the photo-elastic relation and wave equations for inhomogeneous and anisotropic waveguides are reviewed and the effective refractive indexes and mode shapes of planar waveguide under different stress states are obtained analytically.

198 citations

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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202373
2022220
2021628
2020642
2019608
2018581