Stress Analysis of a Elastic Cracked Layer Bonded to a Viscoelastic Substrate

Author(s):  
C. K. Chao ◽  
C. C. Hsiao

The effect of a viscoelastic substrate on an elastic cracked layer under an in-plane concentrated load is solved and discussed in this study. Based on a correspondence principle, the viscoelastic solution is directly obtained from the corresponding elastic one. The elastic solution in an anisotropic trimaterial is solved as a rapidly convergent series in terms of complex potentials via the successive iterations of the alternating technique in order to satisfy the continuity condition along the interfaces between dissimilar media. This trimaterial solution is then applied to a problem of a thin layer bonded to a half-plane substrate. Using the standard solid model to formulate the viscoelastic constitutive equation, the real time stress intensity factors can be directly obtained by performing the numerical calculations. The results obtained in this paper are useful in studying the problem with defects where a crack is assumed to exist in an elastic body that is bonded to a viscoelastic substrate.

2006 ◽  
Vol 306-308 ◽  
pp. 477-482
Author(s):  
Rwei Ching Chang ◽  
Ching Kong Chao ◽  
C.T. Chuang ◽  
P.H. Yang

Theoretical and experimental methods dealing with the effect of a viscoelastic substrate on a cracked body under inplane load are presented in this article. A generalized trimaterial solution is solved as a convergent series in terms of complex potentials via the successive iterations of the alternating technique in order to satisfy the continuity condition along the interfaces between dissimilar media. This trimaterial solution is then applied to the problem of a finite thickness layer bonded to a half-plane substrate. Using a standard solid model to formulate the viscoelastic constitutive equation, the real time stress intensity factors can be directly obtained from the Laplace domain. In the experiment, an aluminum cracked plate bonded to a polymer substrate is tested in a tension machine, where the displacement of the specimen is recorded by a high precision digital camera. The time-dependent stress intensity factor is determined by an inverse calculation through the crack opening displacement. The comparisons between the theoretical and experimental results are discussed in the final.


2017 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 377-398
Author(s):  
Svyatoslav Igorevich Eleonskii ◽  
Igor Nikolaevich Odintsev ◽  
Vladimir Sergeevich Pisarev ◽  
Stanislav Mikhailovich Usov

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