Ductile tearing and discrete void effects on cleavage fracture under small-scale yielding conditions

2005 ◽  
Vol 42 (13) ◽  
pp. 3655-3676 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason P. Petti ◽  
Robert H. Dodds
Author(s):  
Colin J. Madew ◽  
David W. Beardsmore ◽  
Richard O. Howells

Current assessments of pressurised components use fracture data collected on conventional size, 25 mm and 10 mm thick fracture specimens. It would be advantageous to be able to measure fracture toughness on what has commonly been termed miniature specimens (i.e. smaller than 10mm) as this would allow a more economical use of available plant material. However, tests on miniature specimens generally produce values of fracture toughness which over-estimate the fracture toughness of the material (as evaluated from the 25 mm or 10 mm specimens). In particular, the measured scatter in the data exhibits lower-bound values that are higher than the values obtained with conventional size specimens. A study has thus been undertaken in order to examine a methodology to derive fracture toughness from miniature specimens and allow a better determination of the lower-bound values. When cleavage fracture toughness tests are carried out using miniature specimens, the values of critical J obtained do not directly determine the cleavage fracture toughness of the material. This is because a loss of crack-tip constraint will generally occur before fracture. In such cases, it is necessary to apply an appropriate constraint correction to map the measured values to their equivalent small-scale yielding values. This paper uses a method for carrying out constraint corrections in order to assess data obtained from a recent UK miniature fracture toughness specimen testing programme. The method is based on the notion of matching areas enclosed by a same-stress contour of maximum principal stress around the crack tip in the specimen and small-scale yielding geometries. In applying the method, two-dimensional, plane strain finite element models of the specimen geometries have been developed together with a boundary layer model of the reference small-scale yielding condition to determine the appropriate areas.


1988 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 814-817 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter M. Anderson

Conditions are discussed for which the contact zone at the tip of a two-dimensional interface crack between anisotropic elastic materials is small. For such “small scale contact” conditions combined with small scale yielding conditions, a stress concentration vector uniquely characterizes the near tip field, and may be used as a crack growth parameter. Representative calculations for an interface crack on a representative Cu grain boundary show small contact conditions to prevail, except possibly under large shearing loads.


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