Fracture and Structural Integrity (Jul 2017)

On the connection between mode II and mode III effective thresholds in metals

  • Tomáš Vojtek,
  • Stanislav Žák,
  • Jaroslav Pokluda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3221/IGF-ESIS.41.33
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 41
pp. 245 – 251

Abstract

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. Closure-free long cracks under the remote mode III loading grow in a more complicated way than those under the remote mode II. For bcc metals, a coplanar in-plane spreading of tongues driven by the local mode II loading components at crack-front asperities prevails while twisting of crack-front segments to mode I, often leading to factory-roof morphology, is typical for other materials. In bcc metals, therefore, the formulation of a quantitative relationship connecting effective thresholds in modes II and III demands to calculate the local mode II components of stress intensity factors at typical asperities of a crack front loaded in the remote mode III. Therefore, a numerical model of a serrated crack front was created and the results were compared with experimentally determined ratio of mode II and III effective thresholds for the ARMCO iron. Although the calculated crack-front roughness needs an experimental verification, the preliminary results indicate that the model can provide a quantitative explanation of the experimentally observed ratio of mode II and mode III effective thresholds in bcc metals.

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