CHAPTER 2 LEFM Edited31Mac2014
CHAPTER 2 LEFM Edited31Mac2014
CHAPTER 2 LEFM Edited31Mac2014
ELASTIC FRACTURE
MECHANICS (LEFM)
Chapter 2
OVERVIEW
Type
of Loading Modes
Stress Intensity Factor Approach
Experimental Determination of
Fracture Toughness
Energy Balance Approach Strain
Energy Release Rate
Limitation of LEFM and Kdominance
Case Studies
Mode I: Opening
In mode I loading, the principal load is applied normal to the crack plane and tends
to open the crack, the displacements of the crack surfaces are perpendicular to the
crack plane.
Mode II or the sliding mode is resulted from in-plane shear, tends to slide one crack
face with respect to the other, the displacement of the crack surfaces is in plane of
the crack and perpendicular to the leading edge of the crack.
Mode III is caused by out-of-plane shear. The crack surface displacements are in
plane with the crack and parallel to the leading edge of the crack.
Mode I is technically the most important since it is the most severe loading
condition that a crack can be subjected.
Stress--intensity Approach
Stress
Saint--Venants Principle
Saint
Stress Concentration
Example 2.1:
Determine the largest axial load P that can be safely supported by
a flat steel bar consisting of two portions both 10 mm thick and
respectively, 40 mm and 60 mm wide, connected by fillets of radius
r = 8 mm. Assume an allowable normal stress of 165 MPa.
Solution 2.1
Compute the ratios;
Given that;
max = cannot exceed 165 Mpa
Recalling that;
9
P = 36.3 kN
The presence of sharp corners, notches, or cracks serves to concentrate the applied
stress at these points.
Inglis showed, using elasticity theory, that the degree of stress magnification at the
edge of the hole in a stressed plate depended on the radius of curvature of the hole.
The smaller the radius of curvature, the greater the stress concentration.
Inglis found that the stress concentration factor, K, for an elliptical hole is equal
to:
K = 1+ 2
Contd
10
x =
3
cos 1 sin sin
2
2
2
2r
y =
3
cos 1 + sin sin
2
2
2
2r
xy =
3
sin cos cos
2
2
2
2r
= applied stress
11
K I = a
x =
Equation 2
12
Examples 2.2
If a through crack of dimension 2.5 cm is placed in
the material and fracture takes place at a stress of
700 MPa. What is the critical stress intensity factor
of this material?
Solution
K I = a
= 700 10 6 2.5 10 2
= 196.2 MPa m
14
Contd
K I = C a
Brown
2
a
a
a
C = 1 + 0.256 1.152 + 12.2
w
w
w
Feddersen
a
C = sec
w
Dixon
C=
1
2a
1
w
15
16
Example 2.2:
Solution:
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Example 2.3:
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Fracture Toughness:
--Depends on the material, temperature,
environment & rate of loading.
K - Parameters
max
Kt =
ave
K I = a
K IC = f a
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Fracture Toughness
is the ability that a material possesses to absorb
energy in the presence of a flaw.
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design <
Kc
C amax
amax
1 K c
<
C design
amax
fracture
no
fracture
fracture
amax
no
fracture
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KIC values are also used to calculate the critical stress value when a crack of a
given length is found in a component.
Where:
c
KIC
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Problems:
1. A large sheet containing a 50 mm long crack fractures when loaded to 500 MPa. Determine
the fracture load of a similar sheet with a 100 mm crack. [ 354 MPa ]
2. Rocket motor casings may be fabricated from either of two steels ; (a) low alloy steel, yield
1.2 GPa, toughness 70 MPam, (b) maraging steel, yield 1.8 GPa, toughness 50 MPam .
The relevant Code specifies a design stress of yield/1.5.
Calculate the minimum defect size which will lead to brittle fracture in service for each
material. [ 4.9, 1.1 mm ]
3. Consider a plate with an edge crack (see figure). The plate thickness is such that a plane strain
condition is present. Given: W = 1000 mm, stress intensity factor KI = C a where C =
1.12
Answer the next questions for the three materials given in the table above:
a) Does fracture occur at a stress = 2/3 ys and a crack length a = 1 mm?
b) What is the critical defect size at a stress = 2/3 ys ?
c) What is the maximum stress for a crack length a = 1 mm without permanent
consequences?
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[ Yes, no, no, 0.59, 1.6, 2.47 mm, 756, 1461, 500 N/mm2 ]
Problems: contd
5. A noted philanthropist offers you the chance to earn 50 000 by simply hanging from a rope for
just one minute. The rope is attached to a sheet of glass which is 300 cm long by 10 cm wide and
0.127 cm thick. Complicating the situation are: The glass sheet contains a central crack with a
length of 1.62 cm that is orientated parallel to the ground and perpendicular to the longest side of
the glass sheet. The fracture toughness of the glass is known to be 0.83 MPa m1/2. The rope is
suspended over a deep pit containing rather annoyed green mamba snakes. Would you try for the
pot of gold at the end of the rainbow? [ ???]
6. A welded structure is to be fabricated from large sheets of 0.45C-Ni-Cr-Mo steel. The
detection limit of available NDT techniques limits the critical defect size to sizes > 3 mm,
as cracks smaller than this are not detectable. A design stress level of half the tensile
strength is proposed. To save weight in the structure it has been suggested that the steel
could be heat treated to a higher tensile strength level.
The current grade has a tensile strength of 1520 MPa,
and a candidate replacement grade has a 2070 MPa
strength level. Is this change supportable in fracture
mechanics terms? You may assume plane strain
conditions in all computations, and Figure 3
indicates the relationship between fracture toughness
and tensile strength for this steel. Compare the
allowable stress levels, and hence weights, in both
grades of steel for an allowable initial defect size of
approximately 5 mm.
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Figure 3
Experimental Determination
of Fracture Toughness
Specimen preparation
Testing procedure
Calculation of KIC value
Validation of KIC value
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Specimen preparation
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Specimen preparation
Three general ways of sizing test specimens before the required KIC is
actually obtained;
Overestimate KIC on the basis of experience with similar materials and
empirical correlation with other types of notch toughness test, e.g
Charpy impact test.
Use specimen that have as large a thickness as possible.
For high strength materials the ratio of ys/E can be used according to
the following table;
SPECIMEN CONFIGURATIONS
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Testing procedure
The usual practice is to machine a notch with certain
geometry and size in the specimen and then produce a
fatigue crack in the root of the notch by cycle-loading the
specimen.
The experiments are usually performed using servohydraulic mechanical testing machines equipped with
autographic instrumentation to record load and
displacement.
Displacement is usually measured using a clip gauge
which is mounted at the mouth of the machined notch
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If the load/displacement
behaviour shows some
degree of nonlinearity as
depicted in Figure 7.13 (Type
I). This effect can be
attributed to limited stable
crack extension or the plastic
zone growth prior to instability.
In this situation, failure is
defined as 2% crack growth,
which in normal specimen types
would result in a deviation from
a linear trace off about 5%.
Thus, the intersection off a line with a 5% smaller slope than the elastic line
with the load-displacement curve is considered as the critical load.
Type II curve, a small amount of unstable crack growth (pop in) occurs, PQ is
defined at the pop-in.
If the specimen fails in a linear brittle manner,
Type III, the failure load PQ = Pmax is used to
calculate KIQ.
K IQ
PS a
= Q 3 f
w
BW 2
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Since the stress distribution under the notch varies due to specimen
thickness, which also affect toughness of materials of different test
specimen dimensions.
Due to the criterion for brittle fracture in the presence of the notch, the
plane strain condition, is required for the validation of fracture
toughness KIC values. If the following criterion is met;
K IQ
B,W ao , ao 2.5
ys
33
Ref: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2yEgXW1RBs
For thin samples, the value KC decreases with increasing sample thickness, B,
as shown by Figure 1
KC becomes independent of B, at this point the sample is said to be under the
conditions of plane strain.
This fixed value of KC becomes known as the plane strain fracture toughness,
KIC.
Plane Strain - a condition of a body in which the displacements of all points in
the body are parallel to a given plane, and the values of theses displacements
do not depend on the distance perpendicular to the plane. There is zero strain
perpendicular to both the stress axis and the direction of crack propagation;
this condition is found in thick plates, and the zero-strain direction is
perpendicular to the plate surface.
Plane Stress - a condition of a
body in which the state of stress
is such that two of the principal
stresses are always parallel to a
given plane and are constant in
the normal direction.
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U = U o + U a + U F
Total energy, U
UO
Crack length, a
35
o
o
Hence;
dU
d
(F Ua )
da
da
d
(F Ua )
da
dU
da
36
can be rewritten as
GR
Griffith showed that change in the elastic strain energy due to crack;
crack;
Ua =
U a = 1
2a 2
E
2a 2
E
Hence
G=
d
(F Ua ) G = dUa
da
da
G=
o
o
o
G = 1
2a
E
2a
E
K
G= I
E
K
G = I 1 2
E
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In order to ensure the applicability of LEFM, the plastic zone size needs to
be small compared to the crack length.
One basic assumption in Irwin's linear elastic fracture mechanics is small
scale yielding, the condition that the size of the plastic zone is small
compared to the crack length.
However, this assumption is quite restrictive for certain types of failure in
structural steels though such steels can be prone to brittle fracture, which
has led to a number of catastrophic failures.
Some materials are not perfectly elastic but undergo significant plastic
deformation at the tip of a crack.
K Iq
B, W ao , ao 2.5
ys
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44
45
Other Failure ?
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Sinking of Titanic ?
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