A Continuum Model with an Embedded Fracture Process Zone Modelled as a Cohesive Frictional Interface

2016 ◽  
Vol 846 ◽  
pp. 360-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arash Mir ◽  
Giang Dinh Nguyen ◽  
Abdul H. Sheikh

Failure in quasi-brittle materials, such as concrete and rock, usually develops in a fracture process zone (FPZ), in which dissipative processes takes place. At the onset of bifurcation or upon formation of FPZ the homogeneity of kinematic fields is lost and the stress field is redistributed which gives rise to the so called deterministic size effect problem. The total strain energy stored within a specimen of quasi-brittle materials will scale with its size; however, the amount of dissipated energy does not depend on the specimen size but only on the width of the FPZ. This width is related to the microstructure of the material and is considered a characteristic of the material. In this paper, a cohesive frictional interface is used to model the dissipative behaviour of material inside FPZ. Fundamental micro-mechanisms of energy dissipation such as micro-crack opening in mode I and frictional sliding between micro-crack surfaces are formulated within the frame work of Thermodynamic with internal variables (TIV) to ensure the thermodynamics admissibility of the model. The link between the material behaviour inside and outside FPZ is given through the continuity of tractions along the boundaries of FPZ. It is shown that although the shape of the post-peak stress-strain varies, for specimens of different slenderness, the amount of dissipated energy remains the same in all cases.

1994 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 815-821 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. K. Guo ◽  
A. S. Kobayashi ◽  
N. M. Hawkins

The development of the fracture process zone associated with subcritical crack growth in a three-point bend concrete specimen with an off-centered, single-edged precrack was monitored with moire interferometry. The applied load and the crack opening and sliding displacements together with a finite element model of the concrete specimen were used to determine the crack closing stress due to aggregate bridging. Under this mixed-mode fracture, aggregate interlocking increased the crack closing stresses in the fracture process zone and hence the load carrying capacity of the concrete specimen. The dissipated energy rate in the fracture process zone also increased with aggregate interlocking.


2012 ◽  
Vol 170-173 ◽  
pp. 3375-3380
Author(s):  
Liang Wu ◽  
Ze Li ◽  
Shang Huang

The cohesive crack model and the crack band model are two convenient approaches in concrete fracture analysis. They can describe in full the fracture process by the different manner: The entire fracture process zone is lumped into the crack line and is characterized in the form of a stress-displacement law which exhibits softening; or the inelastic deformations in the fracture process zone are smeared over a band of a certain width, imagined to exist in front of the main crack. The correlation of the two models is developed based on a characteristic width of crack band. The analysis shows that they can yield about the same results if the crack opening displacement in the cohesive crack model is taken as the fracturing strain that is accumulated over the width of the crack band model. Some basic problems are also discussed in finite element analysis.


1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (3) ◽  
pp. 300-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. P. Shah ◽  
C. Ouyang

Fracture processes in cement-based materials are characterized by a large-scale fracture process zone, localization of deformation, and strain softening. Many studies have been conducted to understand the toughening mechanisms of such quasi-brittle materials and to theoretically model their nonlinear response. This paper summarizes two innovative experimental techniques which are being developed at the ACBM Center to better define the fracture process zone in cement-based materials. A brief summary is also given of two types of theoretical approaches which attempt to simulate some of the observed nonlinear fracture response of these materials.


1992 ◽  
Vol 287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seijiro Hayashi ◽  
H. Baba ◽  
A. Suzuki

ABSTRACTFracture process zone in SiCw/Si3N4 ceramic composite was studied by a hybrid experimental-numerical analysis employing moire interferometry and finite element analysis. A chevron-notched, wedge-loaded double cantilever beam specimen was used to obtain a stable crack growth. The relation between crack closure stress and crack opening displacement which govern fracture process zone was obtained.


Author(s):  
Shujin Duan ◽  
Quanmin Guo

Based on the weight integration to obtain the closed solution of cohesive crack problem, a method is proposed to obtain the stress function of a simply supported beam under uniform distributed forces in this paper. The key technique is to determine the weight of several solutions of elastic mechanics problems to satisfy the given crack traction within the cohesive crack surfaces and the boundary conditions. The error degree of the function to satisfy the boundary conditions mainly depends on the number and the location of the selected points. In the formed fracture process zone, there is both the finite magnitude of stress concentration and the smooth closed-crack opening displacement. The FE numerical simulation is also carried out; its results are in good agreement with the present theoretical calculation results.


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