Galerkin representation of the plane strain in elastic-earth models with initial static stress field

1972 ◽  
Vol 5 (8) ◽  
pp. 620-624
Author(s):  
E. Boschi
2015 ◽  
Vol 127 ◽  
pp. 727-734
Author(s):  
Rajitha Gurijala ◽  
Malla Reddy Perati

1992 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 559-567 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. Drugan ◽  
Y. Miao

We perform an analytical first study of the influence of a uniform porosity distribution, for the entire range of porosity level, on the stress field near a plane strain tensile crack tip in ductile material. Such uniform porosity distributions (approximately) arise in incompletely sintered or previously deformed (e.g., during processing) ductile metals and alloys. The elastic-plastic Gurson-Tvergaard constitutive formulation is employed. This model has a sound micromechanical basis, and has been shown to agree well with detailed numerical finite element solutions of, and with experiments on, voided materials. To facilitate closed-form analytical results to the extent possible, we treat nonhardening material with constant, uniform porosity. We show that the assumption of singular plastic strain in the limit as the crack tip is approached renders the governing equations statically determinate with two permissible types of near-tip angular sector: one with constant Cartesian components of stress (“constant stress”); and one with radial stress characteristics (“generalized centered fan”). The former admits an exact asymptotic closed-form stress field representation, and although we prove the latter does not, we derive a highly accurate closed-form approximate representation. We show that complete near-tip solutions can be constructed from these two sector types for the entire range of porosity. These solutions are comprised of three asymptotic sector configurations: (i) “generalized Prandtlfield”for low porosities (0 ≤ f ≤ .02979), similar to the plane strain Prandtl field of fully dense materials, with a fully continuous stress field but sector extents that vary with porosity; (ii) “plane-stress-like field” for intermediate porosities (.02979 < f < .12029), resembling the plane stress solution for fully dense materials, with a ray of radial normal stress discontinuity but sector extents that vary with porosity; (iii) two constant stress sectors for the remaining high porosity range, with a ray of radial normal stress discontinuity and fixed sector extents. Among several interesting features, the solutions show that increasing porosity causes significant modification of the angular variation of stress components, particularly for a range of angles ahead of the crack tip, while also causing a drastic reduction in maximum hydrostatic stress level.


1989 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 786-790 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Dundurs

There is a strange feature of plane elasticity that seems to have gone unnoticed: The stresses in a body that contains rigid inclusions and is loaded by specified surface tractions depend on the Poisson ratio of the material. If the Poisson ratio in this stress field is set equal to +1 for plane strain, or +∞ for plane stress, the rigid inclusions become cavities for elastic constants within the physical range. The paper pursues this circumstance, and in doing so also produces several useful by-products that are connected with the stretching and curvature change of a boundary.


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