Applied Sciences (Sep 2024)

Implementation of a Two-Dimensional Finite-Element Fatigue Damage Model with Peridynamics to Simulate Crack Growth in a Compact Tension Specimen

  • Kyle Mansfield,
  • Levee Callahan,
  • Ting Xia,
  • Jenn-Terng Gau,
  • Jifu Tan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app14177858
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 17
p. 7858

Abstract

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The traditional finite element method (FEM) has limitations in accurately modeling crack propagation. Peridynamics, a nonlocal extension of the classical continuum theory, provides an alternative approach to remedy the limitations of the FEM but with a higher computational cost. In this paper, a peridynamic bond-based fatigue damage model is developed and incorporated into a commercial finite-element software (ABAQUS 2017) via user subroutines. Model-predicted results including the crack path spatial position and the damage accumulation rate were validated against empirical data. The predicted crack growth as a function of loading cycle and crack trajectory showed good agreement with the experimental data over 200,000 loading cycles. Therefore, the integration of the peridynamic bond-based fatigue damage model into existing FEM software provides an economical means to simulate complex fracture behaviors, such as crack growth, in a compact tension specimen examined in this paper.

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