dynamic stress intensity factors
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Author(s):  
Y Peng ◽  
P Yang

The dynamic stress intensity factors (DSIFs) for cracked stiffened plates considering the actual boundary conditions in ship structures are analyzed by the extended finite element method (XFEM). The sensitivity of numerical results with respect to mesh size and time step is discussed. Some other influential parameters including stiffener height, crack location and crack length are also analyzed. The numerical results show that the convergence is affected by mesh size and time step. By using XFEM, singular elements are not needed at the crack front and moderately refined meshes can achieve good accuracy. The height of the stiffener and crack location significantly effect DSIFs, while the crack length slightly influences the DSIFs.


2021 ◽  
pp. 108128652110149
Author(s):  
Ni An ◽  
Tianshu Song ◽  
Gangling Hou

The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the stress concentration at the tip of a permeable interfacial crack near an eccentric elliptical hole in piezoelectric bi-materials under anti-plane shearing. Fracture analysis is performed by Green’s function method and the conformal mapping method, which are used to solve the boundary conditions problem. The mechanical model of the interfacial crack is constructed by interface-conjunction and crack-deviation techniques so that the crack problem is simplified as solving a series of the first kind of Fredholm’s integral equations, from which the dynamic stress intensity factors (DSIFs) at the inner and the outer crack-tips can be derived. The validity of the present method is verified by comparing with a crack emerging from the edge of a circular hole as a reference. Numerical cases reveal parametric dependence of DSIFs on the geometry of eccentric elliptical holes and interfacial cracks, the characteristics of the incident wave, the equivalent piezoelectric elastic modulus and piezoelectric parameters. The results illustrate that the eccentric distance has a great effect on the stress concentration at the crack tip, which may be harmful to the normal service of piezoelectric devices and materials. In addition, the method proposed in this paper can also deal with non-eccentric problems and has wider applicability.


2020 ◽  
Vol 162 (A1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Peng ◽  
P Yang

The dynamic stress intensity factors (DSIFs) for cracked stiffened plates considering the actual boundary conditions in ship structures are analyzed by the extended finite element method (XFEM). The sensitivity of numerical results with respect to mesh size and time step is discussed. Some other influential parameters including stiffener height, crack location and crack length are also analyzed. The numerical results show that the convergence is affected by mesh size and time step. By using XFEM, singular elements are not needed at the crack front and moderately refined meshes can achieve good accuracy. The height of the stiffener and crack location significantly effect DSIFs, while the crack length slightly influences the DSIFs.


Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 669
Author(s):  
Yinhuan Jiang ◽  
Chuanping Zhou ◽  
Ban Wang ◽  
Liqun Wu

A theoretical method is developed to study the magnetoelastic coupled wave and dynamic stress intensity around a cylindrical aperture in exponential graded piezomagnetic materials. By employing the decoupling technique, the coupled magnetoelastic governing equations are decomposed. Then the analytic solutions of elastic wave fields and magnetic fields are presented by using the wave function expansion method. By satisfying the boundary conditions of the aperture, the mode coefficients, and the analytic solutions of dynamic stress intensity factors are determined. The numerical examples of the dynamic stress intensity factor near the aperture are presented. The numerical results indicate that the incident wave number, the piezomagnetic properties, and the nonhomogeneous parameter of materials highly influence the dynamic stress around the aperture.


Author(s):  
Panagiotis J. Charitidis

This study focusses on the experimental and numerical investigation of the continuous carbon fiber-reinforced silicon carbide (SiC), and silicon nitride (Si3N4) matrix composites. A testing procedure has been designed to study the Charpy impact testing system. The dynamic elastic-plastic fracture toughness (JdSiC=11.88kJ/m2 and JdSi3N4=1.77kJ/m2) as well as the dynamic stress intensity factors (kdSiC=36.88 MPaem2and JdSi3N4=22.03 MPaem2) have been evaluated. Further on, a good agreement between finite element results and experimental findings was found.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Bang Liu ◽  
Zheming Zhu ◽  
Ruifeng Liu ◽  
Lei Zhou ◽  
Duanying Wan

Radial cracks may exist around tunnel edge, and these cracks may propagate and weaken tunnel stability under nearby blasting operations. In order to study the blast-induced fracture behavior of radial cracks emanating from a tunnel spandrel, a tunnel model containing a spandrel crack (TMCSC) with different inclination angles was proposed in this paper. Crack propagation gauges (CPGs) and strain gauges were used in the experiments to measure crack initiation moment and propagation time. Finite difference models were established by using AUTODYN code to simulate crack propagation behavior and propagation path. ABAQUS code was used to calculate dynamic stress intensity factors (SIFs). The results show that (1) crack inclination angles affect crack initiation angles and crack propagation lengths significantly; (2) critical SIFs of both mode I and mode II decrease gradually with the increase of the crack propagation speed; (3) the dynamic energy release rates vary during crack propagation; and (4) there are “crack arrest points” on the crack propagation paths in which the crack propagation speed is very small.


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