Discontinuous Displacement at Solvent–Immobile Hydrocarbon Interfaces

2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 9392-9400
Author(s):  
Haoxiang Wang ◽  
John M. Shaw ◽  
Zhehui Jin
2012 ◽  
Vol 433-440 ◽  
pp. 6558-6564
Author(s):  
You Li Ma

For a slant pre-crack under mixed-mode conditions, a method is proposed in which mode Ⅰ and mode Ⅱ stress intensity factors ‹KI›mes and ‹KII›mes can be directly evaluated from the discontinuous displacement along it. The effect on fatigue pre-crack deformation behavior was discussed by comparing fatigue and annealed cracks. In general, using the biggest tangential stress criterion the direction propagating from the pre-cracks can be predicted by ‹KI›mes and ‹KII›mes calculated above. So testing for bending fatigue crack propagation under mixed-mode conditions was carried out using fatigue and annealed slant pre-cracks with slant angle β=450 defined as the angle between loading and pre-crack direction in a rectangular plate. As a result, for annealed pre-crack, the estimated fracture angle θestcorresponded to the measured oneθmes ; On the other hand, for fatigue pre-crack,θmes is bigger than θest because of the compressive residual stress around the pre-crack .


It is proved that a chemical potential μ v = u v – Ts v + pv v may be introduced for every chemical component v which may be considered a possible component everywhere in a multiphase system in thermodynamic equilibrium under non-hydrostatic stresses, where —3 p is the trace of the stress tensor. It is a condition of equilibrium that μ v has the same value throughout such a system and it is shown that in a virtual infinitesimal variation d U = T d S + d W + Ʃ v μ v d N v , where U, S are the total energy and entropy of the multi-phase system, and d W is the total mechanical work done on the system. At an interface between phases where a discontinuous displacement is permitted, it is shown also that μ v = u v - Ts v + P n v v , for both phases in contact at the interface, P n being the normal component of the pressure at the interface. In a system in which each phase is under a uniform stress and is connected to at least one other phase by such an interface, all phases at equilibrium must thus have the same value of p , and the normal component of the pressure at every such interface must also be p . An important example of this latter result is that of a fluid-solid system, for which, if p is the fluid pressure, the solid must be under an equal hydrostatic pressure p together with a shear stress whose principal directions are perpendicular to the normal of the interface, this new result representing a considerable restriction on the possible stress in a solid at chemical equilibrium with the fluid. The chemical potential is not assumed to exist but is introduced as an undetermined multiplier in the application of the Gibbs condition of thermodynamic equilibrium, and all its important properties are deduced. The same method may be applied more simply in hydrostatic cases.


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