Stress intensity factors of two diametrically opposed edge cracks in a thick-walled functionally graded material cylinder

2007 ◽  
Vol 74 (10) ◽  
pp. 1617-1636 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.M. Afsar ◽  
M. Anisuzzaman
Author(s):  
Safa Peyman ◽  
Rahmatollah Ghajar ◽  
Saeed Irani

Dynamic stress intensity factors are important parameters in the dynamic fracture behavior of a cracked body. In this paper, an interaction integral method is utilized to compute the mixed-mode dynamic stress intensity factors of three-dimensional functionally graded material solids. Using a proper definition of actual and auxiliary fields, a new formulation and application of the interaction integral is proposed, which is independent of the derivatives of the material properties. ABAQUS finite element package is applied to analyze the functionally graded material cracked bodies. Accordingly, a user material subroutine is written for implementing the continuous variation of the material properties. Temperature was used as an additional variable to consider the variation of density. A research code is developed to compute the interaction integral. This code is then validated by solving some homogeneous and functionally graded material problems. Furthermore, the effect of the material properties on the dynamic stress intensity factors of FGM bodies with elliptical crack is investigated by taking the sigmoidal model into account. Several important fracture behavior of functionally graded material cracked bodies under dynamic loadings for different material property profiles are explored in detail.


2005 ◽  
Vol 492-493 ◽  
pp. 403-408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeong Ho Kim ◽  
Glaucio H. Paulino

This paper revisits the interaction integral method to evaluate both the mixed-mode stress intensity factors and the T-stress in functionally graded materials under mechanical loading. A nonequilibrium formulation is developed in an equivalent domain integral form, which is naturally suitable to the finite element method. Graded material properties are integrated into the element stiffness matrix using the generalized isoparametric formulation. The type of material gradation considered includes continuum functions, such as an exponential function, but the present formulation can be readily extended to micromechanical models. This paper presents a fracture problem with an inclined center crack in a plate and assesses the accuracy of the present method compared with available semi-analytical solutions.


2000 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 284-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. H. Paulino ◽  
Z.-H. Jin

In this paper, a crack in a strip of a viscoelastic functionally graded material is studied under antiplane shear conditions. The shear relaxation function of the material is assumed as μ=μ0 expβy/hft, where h is a length scale and f(t) is a nondimensional function of time t having either the form ft=μ∞/μ0+1−μ∞/μ0exp−t/t0 for a linear standard solid, or ft=t0/tq for a power-law material model. We also consider the shear relaxation function μ=μ0 expβy/h[t0 expδy/h/t]q in which the relaxation time depends on the Cartesian coordinate y exponentially. Thus this latter model represents a power-law material with position-dependent relaxation time. In the above expressions, the parameters β, μ0,μ∞,t0; δ, q are material constants. An elastic crack problem is first solved and the correspondence principle (revisited) is used to obtain stress intensity factors for the viscoelastic functionally graded material. Formulas for stress intensity factors and crack displacement profiles are derived. Results for these quantities are discussed considering various material models and loading conditions.


2012 ◽  
Vol 195-196 ◽  
pp. 787-790
Author(s):  
Bo He ◽  
Hong Cai Zhang

In this paper, the fracture problem of functionally graded material (FGM) was studied, and the shear modulus was assumed to be an exponential function. The influences of inhomogeneous parameter, crack size and crack angle on the stress intensity factors have been analyzed by the finite element method. The results indicated that the stress intensity factors of mode I decreased with the increasing of the crack angle, the stress intensity factors of mode II increased with the increasing of the crack angle, and the crack stress intensity factor of mode I and mode II decreased with the increasing of the inhomogeneous parameters at crack tips, which was of certain directive significance for the FGM design and manufacture in the actual engineering.


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