Transcript
Page 1: Fracture Mechanics Lecture 1 Recap

Fracture Mechanics Lecture 1Recap

By visiting student from SkTech (Moscow), Dmitrii (Dima) Vasilev

18.10.2012

Page 2: Fracture Mechanics Lecture 1 Recap

We started with the problem to be solved in fracture mechanics

• What is the magnitude of the load that will cause the body (material) to fracture?

Let us assume we are creating a new material

Then,

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The procedure to answer the question is the following

• What is the maximum stress in the body?

• What is the strength of material?

• When τ(max) = X(Material Strength) – material fractures

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To proceed we need to use Theory of Linear Elasticity

Let’s assume we found each stress component for each particle

Then we find maximum stresses from eigenvalues

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Stress concentration• It turns out that in some specific areas of the

body the stresses may be higher than the applied load

F

F

Stress concentration

Stress concentration

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Due to linearity…• τ(max)=c*τ(app)

F

F

Stress concentration

Stress concentration

C=3 C=1+2a/b

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Strength of material

• Theory cannot accurately predict strengthBut

• We can conduct experiments

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However…

• The maximum stress in a body is sensitive to the shape of the flaw

• The shape of the flaw inside the body is seldom known

• We assume linear elasticity• Strength depends on the sample shape

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Griffith attempts

Some experiments were conducted on the glass sample. Conclusions:1) In a body of glass cracks pre-exist.2) The tip of such crack concentrate stresses.3) The intense stress breaks atomic bonds one

by one, like opening a zipper.4) As the crack advances,

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The main conclusion is that there is a competition between 2 factors while the crack advances: releasing elastic energy forces the crack to grow, while surface crack energy (which grows) is trying to stop the crack expansion (to heal the crack). U

a

a*=2γE/πσ^2

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Why the discussed material is tremendously important?

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My previous work

300 tons of liquid

steelNew material for ladle lining – Carbonized Periclase,which has a thermal expansion coefficient significantly higher than previous materials

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What I found

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Video of numerical methods that I used to solve that problem


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