scholarly journals Fracture toughness design in horse hoof keratin

1986 ◽  
Vol 125 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Bertram ◽  
J. M. Gosline

An engineering fracture mechanics approach was applied to the analysis of the fracture resistance of equine hoof-wall. The relationship between fracture toughness and the morphological organization of the keratin hoof tissue was investigated. Fracture toughness was evaluated using the J-integral analysis method which employs the compact tension test geometry. Tensile tests were also conducted to evaluate the effect of the morphological organization on the stress-strain behaviour. Hoof-wall has greatest fracture resistance for cracks running proximally, parallel to the tubular component of the wall keratin. For fully hydrated material tested in this direction the mean critical J-integral value at failure was 1.19 X 10(4)J m-2. This was nearly three times greater than the value determined for the weakest orientation, in which the crack ran parallel to the material between the tubules. The lower fracture toughness of the intertubular material dominates the fracture behaviour of this tissue. The tubular components of the wall appear to reinforce against fracture along the weak plane and the entire wall organization provides the mechanical capability for limiting and controlling fracture in this tissue.

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Waseem Ur Rahman ◽  
Rafiullah khan ◽  
Noor Rahman ◽  
Ziyad Awadh Alrowaili ◽  
Baseerat Bibi ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: Understanding the fracture mechanics of bone is very important in both the medical and bioengineering field. Bone is a hierarchical natural composite material of nanoscale collagen fibers and inorganic material. OBJECTIVE: This study investigates and presents the fracture toughness of bovine cortical bone by using elastic plastic fracture mechanics. METHODS: The J-integral was used as a parameter to calculate the energies utilized in both elastic deformation (Jel) and plastic deformation (Jpl) of the hipbone fracture. Twenty four different types of specimens, i.e. longitudinal compact tension (CT) specimens, transverse CT specimens, and also rectangular unnotched specimens for tension in longitudinal and transverse orientation, were cut from the bovine hip bone of the middle diaphysis. All CT specimens were prepared according to the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) E1820 standard and were tested at room temperature. RESULTS: The results showed that the average total J-integral in transverse CT fracture specimens is 26% greater than that of longitudinal CT fracture specimens. For longitudinal-fractured and transverse-fractured cortical specimens, the energy used in the elastic deformation was found to be 2.8–3 times less than the energy used in the plastic deformation. CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that the overall fracture toughness measured using the J-integral is significantly higher than the toughness calculated by the stress intensity factor. Therefore, J-integral should be employ to compute the fracture toughness of cortical bone.


Author(s):  
Y. Kim ◽  
Y. J. Chao ◽  
M. J. Pechersky ◽  
M. J. Morgan

Elastic-plastic crack front fields in arc-shaped tension specimens (C-specimens) were analyzed by a three-dimensional finite element method. The effect of side grooves on the ductile fracture behavior was investigated by studying the J-integral distribution, plane-strain constraint parameter, and development of plastic zones and comparing to experimental data. The applicability of the η factor (derived for use with compact tension specimens) for the calculation of J-integral values for the C-specimen was also investigated. The results show that side grooves promote and establish near plane strain conditions at the crack front in sub-size specimens. It was also found that a two-dimensional plane-strain analysis in conjunction with the standard American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) tests was sufficient to determine the fracture toughness values from side-grooved C-specimen. The results indicate the η factor for compact tension specimen as specified in the ASTM standards appears to produce reliable results for the calculation of J of C-specimens.


2004 ◽  
Vol 126 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Kim ◽  
Y. J. Chao ◽  
M. J. Pechersky ◽  
M. J. Morgan

Elastic-plastic crack front fields in arc-shaped tension specimens (C-specimens) were analyzed by a three-dimensional finite element method. The effect of side grooves on the ductile fracture behavior was investigated by studying the J-integral distribution, plane-strain constraint parameter, and development of plastic zones and comparing to experimental data. The applicability of the η factor (derived for use with compact tension specimens) for the calculation of J-integral values for the C-specimen was also investigated. The results show that side grooves promote and establish near plane strain conditions at the crack front in sub-size specimens. It was also found that a two-dimensional plane-strain analysis in conjunction with the standard American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) tests was sufficient to determine the fracture toughness values from side-grooved C-specimen. The results indicate the η factor for compact tension specimen as specified in the ASTM standards appears to produce reliable results for the calculation of J of C-specimens.


2009 ◽  
Vol 417-418 ◽  
pp. 917-920
Author(s):  
Xian Hua Chen ◽  
Hong Tao Li ◽  
Zhen Dong Qian

The fracture properties of the thermo-setting materials of epoxy asphalt mixture were evaluated based on J-integral concept and ultimate strength and compared to that of HMA with thermo-plastic binder materials. Totally 60 specimens cored from SGC with different notches were tested with SCB test under a temperature of -10°C and 20°C. The experimental results reveals that epoxy asphalt mixture has a super higher resistance of fracture at low temperature than thermo-plastic HMA due to its super high tensile strength and flexibility, and the influences of temperature on the fracture resistance of EAM is not so significant as that of thermo-plastic HMA. Good repeatability of SCB test results indicates the capability of the SCB test to be useful for measuring the fracture toughness of epoxy asphalt mixture.


Author(s):  
D. Frómeta ◽  
A. Lara ◽  
L. Grifé ◽  
T. Dieudonné ◽  
P. Dietsch ◽  
...  

AbstractThe fracture resistance of different advanced high-strength steel (AHSS) sheets for automotive applications is investigated through conventional tensile tests, fracture toughness measurements, and hole expansion tests. Different fracture-related parameters, such as the true fracture strain (TFS), the true thickness strain (TTS), the fracture toughness at crack initiation (w e i ), the specific essential work of fracture (we), and the hole expansion ratio (HER), are assessed. The specific essential work of fracture (we) is shown to be a suitable parameter to evaluate the local formability and fracture resistance of AHSS. The results reveal that fracture toughness cannot be estimated from any of the parameters derived from tensile tests and show the importance of microstructural features on crack propagation resistance. Based on the relation fracture toughness-local formability, a new AHSS classification mapping accounting for global formability and cracking resistance is proposed. Furthermore, a physically motivated fracture criterion for edge-cracking prediction, based on thickness strain measurements in fatigue pre-cracked DENT specimens, is proposed.


Author(s):  
Masahiro Takanashi ◽  
Satoshi Izumi ◽  
Shinsuke Sakai ◽  
Naoki Miura

In the present study, the transferability of elastic-plastic fracture toughness from a small-scale to a large-scale specimen was experimentally confirmed for carbon steel pipe with mild toughness. Fracture toughness tests were carried out on a pipe specimen 318.5 mm in outer diameter, 10.3 mm in thickness and having a through-wall crack, and also on a compact tension specimen 9.7mm in thickness, 25.4 mm in width, that had been cut out from the pipe specimen. Test results indicated the J-integral value of the pipe specimen at the crack initiation to be nearly twice that of the CT specimen. Finite element analysis conducted on the two specimens indicated this difference to arise primarily from the constraint near the crack front. Discussion was also made of the effects of crack orientation on elastic-plastic fracture toughness of CT specimens. The J-integral value at crack initiation in the specimen whose crack direction coincided with the pipe axial was found to be almost 54 % more than for specimens whose crack direction was circumferential.


1977 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
N J I Adams ◽  
H G Munro

SummaryFollowing a brief introduction, an examination is presented of the factors which define fracture toughness, resistance-curve relationships and the extent of stable crack extension in thin-sheet failure. Tests have been performed on three aluminium alloys to establish the variations in the shape of resistance curves, using both compliance-indicated and measured absolute values of crack length in compact tension specimens and centre crack sheets. The results show that both the toughness and the resistance curves of the two specimen types are different and that these differences cannot be explained wholly by consideration of crack tip plastic zone sizes.


Author(s):  
Eui-kyun Park ◽  
Gyo-Geun Youn ◽  
Yun-Jae Kim ◽  
Masayuki Kamaya

Abstract In this study, the finite element (FE) damage analysis based on the multi-axial fracture strain model was applied to investigate the effect of the material ductility on fracture resistance of notched defect. (The fracture toughness is used only for a cracked specimen and the fracture resistance is used for notched specimens throughout the paper.) To obtain the material property with different ductility, the tensile and fracture toughness tests of the cold-worked SUS316 were used. The damage model was determined from comparing the experimental data with simulated FE analysis results. Then the FE analysis was applied to calculate the fracture resistance according to the notch radius in each material. It shows that the slope of initiation resistance according to the notch radius was related to the material ductility. To quantify this effect of ductility, the relationship between notch fracture resistance and material tensile properties was confirmed.


Author(s):  
Bruce W. Williams ◽  
William R. Tyson ◽  
C. Hari M. Simha ◽  
Bogdan Wasiluk

Abstract CSA Standard N285.8 requires leak-before-break and fracture protection for Zr-2.5Nb pressure tubes in operating CANDU reactors. In-service deuterium uptake causes the formation of hydrides, which can result in additional variability and reduction of fracture toughness. Pressure tube fracture toughness is assessed mainly through rising pressure tube section burst tests. Given the length of the ex-service pressure tubes required for burst testing and the requirement to increase the hydrogen content of irradiated ex-service pressure tubes, only a limited number of burst tests can be performed. Using small-scale compact tension, C(T), specimens are advantageous for obtaining a statistically significant number of fracture toughness measurements while using less ex-service pressure tube material. This work focuses on the study of C(T) geometry designs in order to obtain crack growth resistance and fracture toughness closer to those deduced from burst tests. Because C(T) specimens must be machined from pressure tubes of about 100 mm in diameter and 4 mm in wall thickness, they are out-of-plane curved. As well, they undergo significant tunnelling during crack extension. These two factors can result in a violation of the ASTM standard for fracture toughness testing. The current work examined the influence of specimen curvature and tunnelled crack front on the crack growth resistance curve, or J-R curve. Finite element (FE) models using stationary and growing cracks were used in a detailed numerical investigation. To capture crack tunnelling in the FE models, a damage mechanics approach was adopted, with the critical strain to accumulate damage being a function of crack front stress triaxiality. The J-integral numerically estimated from the domain integral approach was compared to the J-integral calculated from the analytical equations in the ASTM E-1820 standard. In most cases, the difference between the numerical and the standard estimations was less than 10%, which was considered acceptable. It was found that at higher load levels of load-line-displacement, specimen curvature influenced the J-integral results. Crack tunnelling was shown to have a small influence on the estimated J-integrals, in comparison with the straight crack fronts. A modest number of experiments were carried out on unirradiated Zr-2.5Nb pressure tube material using three designs of curved C(T) specimens. It was found that the specimens of both designs that featured a width of 34 mm had more than twice the crack extension of the specimens of the 17-mm width design. The 17-mm width specimens are used mainly to assess the small-scale fracture toughness of pressure tube material. Additionally, the applied J-integral at the maximum load was about 1.4 times higher for the larger-width C(T) specimens. These C(T) specimens also produced J-R curves with greater crack extensions, which were closer to those obtained from the pressure tube section burst tests. Artificially hydrided pressure tube material was not considered in the current work, to avoid any potential source of experimental variability; however, it should be considered in future work.


2011 ◽  
Vol 162 (4) ◽  
pp. 254-269
Author(s):  
Grzegorz LESIUK ◽  
Józef RABIEGA ◽  
Mieczysław SZATA

In the paper the investigation results of puddled steel from nineteenth-century constructions are presented. The results of static tensile tests after more than 130-year operating period: fracture toughness, the critical value of the J integral and the fatigue crack growth, and dynamic tests – toughness results are presented in this article. The results show a significant effect of degradation processes. The abovementioned processes caused the brittleness of puddled steel. All the tests were performed for the material in two states, i.e. post-operated and normalised ones. In accordance with the guidelines developed in the framework of the degradation theory [4] and its material aspects [8], normalising is designed to reproduce the microstructure of steel in the initial state. The results presented allow us to draw the conclusions about trends related to the nature and future negative changes in mechanical properties.


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