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On crack path stability in a layered material

Gunnars, J. ; Ståhle, P. LU and Wang, T. C. LU (1997) In Computational Mechanics 19(6). p.545-552
Abstract

Crack paths in an elastic layer on top of a substrate are considered. Crack growth is initiated from an edge crack in the layer. The plane of the initially straight crack forms an angle to the free surface. The load consists of a pair of forces applied at the crack mouth and parallel to the interface. Crack paths are calculated using a boundary element method. Crack growth is assumed to proceed along a path for which the mode II stress intensity factor vanishes. The inclination and the length of the initial crack are varied. The effect of two different substrates on the crack path evolution is demonstrated. A crack path initially leading perpendicularly to the interface is shown to be directionally unstable for a rigid substrate.... (More)

Crack paths in an elastic layer on top of a substrate are considered. Crack growth is initiated from an edge crack in the layer. The plane of the initially straight crack forms an angle to the free surface. The load consists of a pair of forces applied at the crack mouth and parallel to the interface. Crack paths are calculated using a boundary element method. Crack growth is assumed to proceed along a path for which the mode II stress intensity factor vanishes. The inclination and the length of the initial crack are varied. The effect of two different substrates on the crack path evolution is demonstrated. A crack path initially leading perpendicularly to the interface is shown to be directionally unstable for a rigid substrate. Irrespective of its initial angle, the crack does not reach the interface, but reaches the free surface if the layer is infinitely long. At finite layer length the crack reaches the upper free surface if the initial crack inclination to the surface is small enough. For an inextendable flexible substrate, on the other hand, the crack reaches the interface if its initial inclination is large enough. For the flexible substrate an unstable path parallel with the sides of an infinitely long layer is identified. The results are compared with experimental results and discussed in view of characterisation of directionally unstable crack paths. The energy release rate for an inclined edge crack is determined analytically.

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type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Computational Mechanics
volume
19
issue
6
pages
8 pages
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • scopus:0031139199
ISSN
0178-7675
DOI
10.1007/s004660050207
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
70157ff7-8e5f-437e-99ec-bae835357eeb
date added to LUP
2020-03-07 11:21:27
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2022-02-01 04:59:30
@article{70157ff7-8e5f-437e-99ec-bae835357eeb,
  abstract     = {{<p>Crack paths in an elastic layer on top of a substrate are considered. Crack growth is initiated from an edge crack in the layer. The plane of the initially straight crack forms an angle to the free surface. The load consists of a pair of forces applied at the crack mouth and parallel to the interface. Crack paths are calculated using a boundary element method. Crack growth is assumed to proceed along a path for which the mode II stress intensity factor vanishes. The inclination and the length of the initial crack are varied. The effect of two different substrates on the crack path evolution is demonstrated. A crack path initially leading perpendicularly to the interface is shown to be directionally unstable for a rigid substrate. Irrespective of its initial angle, the crack does not reach the interface, but reaches the free surface if the layer is infinitely long. At finite layer length the crack reaches the upper free surface if the initial crack inclination to the surface is small enough. For an inextendable flexible substrate, on the other hand, the crack reaches the interface if its initial inclination is large enough. For the flexible substrate an unstable path parallel with the sides of an infinitely long layer is identified. The results are compared with experimental results and discussed in view of characterisation of directionally unstable crack paths. The energy release rate for an inclined edge crack is determined analytically.</p>}},
  author       = {{Gunnars, J. and Ståhle, P. and Wang, T. C.}},
  issn         = {{0178-7675}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  number       = {{6}},
  pages        = {{545--552}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Computational Mechanics}},
  title        = {{On crack path stability in a layered material}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s004660050207}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s004660050207}},
  volume       = {{19}},
  year         = {{1997}},
}