static crack
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Author(s):  
Bing Chen ◽  
Tiantang Yu ◽  
Sundararajan Natarajan ◽  
Qing Zhang ◽  
Tinh Quoc Bui

Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (17) ◽  
pp. 4947
Author(s):  
Yueqi Bi ◽  
Xiaoming Yuan ◽  
Jishuang Lv ◽  
Rehmat Bashir ◽  
Shuai Wang ◽  
...  

Due to the particularity of welding processes, the mechanical properties of welded joint materials, especially the yield strength, are unevenly distributed, and there are also a large number of micro cracks, which seriously affects the safety performance of welded joints. In this study, to analyze the effect of the uneven distribution of yield strength on the crack propagation path of welded joints, other mechanical properties and residual stresses of welded joints are ignored. In the ABAQUS 6.14 finite element software, the user-defined field (USDFLD) subroutine is used to define the unevenly distributed yield strength, and extended finite element (XFEM) is used to simulate crack propagation. In addition, the static crack finite element model of the welded joint model is established according to the crack propagation path, which is given the static crack model constant stress intensity factor load, and the influence of an uneven yield strength distribution on mechanical field is analyzed. The results show that the crack length of welded joints as well as the plastic deformation range of the crack tip in high stress areas can be reduced with the increase of yield strength along the crack propagation direction. Moreover, the crack deflects to the low yield strength side. This study provides an analytical reference for the crack path prediction of welded joints.


CORROSION ◽  
10.5006/3572 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramgopal Thodla ◽  
Anand Venkatesh

Fatigue crack growth rate was developed on three heats of alloy 718 (UNS N07718) under cathodic polarization, over a wide range of loading conditions. Fatigue crack growth rate increased with decreasing frequency over a range of Kmax and K conditions. In most cases, there was no evidence of a plateau in fatigue crack growth rate at low frequencies. The fatigue crack growth rate over the range of conditions evaluated were influenced by static crack growth rate at Kmax. The principle of superposition of fatigue crack growth and static crack growth was used to rationalize the observed crack growth rate response. Static crack growth rate of alloy 718 measured under constant K conditions, was lower than that measured under rising displacement conditions. A crack tip strain rate based model was used to rationalize the fatigue crack growth rate behavior and the static crack growth rate behavior under constant K. However, the formulation of the model for the rising K was not able to rationalize the crack growth rate under rising displacement conditions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Severine Furst ◽  
Virginie Pinel ◽  
Francesco Maccaferri

<p>The tortuous travel of magma through the crust may sometimes result in volcanic eruptions at the surface. In the brittle crust, magma propagation usually occurs by fracturing the rock and opening its own way through them. This process of diking is controlled by the interaction of many complex physical processes including rock fracture, flow of compressible fluids, phase transitions, heat exchange. Current models of dikes consider either a fracturing-dominated approach, that neglects the viscous flow and allow to estimate the trajectory of dike propagation, or a viscous-dominated approach that neglects the fracturing at the dike tip allowing to infer the propagation velocity of the dike. Here we propose a new numerical approach aiming at modeling both the magma path and velocity. We start from a two-dimensional Boundary Element model solving for the trajectory of a quasi-static crack in an elastic medium subjected to external stress (Maccaferri et al, 2011), and implement the effects of the viscous fluid flow assuming a Poiseuille flow. We build on the previous work by Dahm (2000) but relaxing the assumption of stationarity, and thus allowing to take into account heterogeneous crustal stresses, complex dike paths, and dike velocity variations. The fluid flow results in a viscous pressure drop applied to the crack wall, which modifies the crack shape and contributes to the energy balance of the propagating dike. In fact, the energy dissipated by viscous flow is linearly dependant on the viscosity of the fluid and the crack velocity. It follows that the velocity can be inferred from the total energy budget by imposing that the viscous energy dissipation and the energy spent to fracture the rocks equals the strain-plus-gravitational energy release. However, the viscous dissipation strongly depends on the opening of each dislocation element, causing numerical instabilities in the calculation of the dike velocity due to the fracture closure at the dike tail. We will present first results of velocities derived with this approach considering only a static crack shape (that is to say neglecting the modification of the crack shape induced by the flow). We will discuss the influence of various parameters (crack size, Young’s modulus value...), and will compare the numerical velocities obtained with observations, first considering velocities measured in analogue experiments when injecting fluids of various viscosity (air and oils) in gelatin tanks, and secondly using diking events documented at basaltic volcanoes (such as Piton de la Fournaise (Réunion) and Mount Etna (Sicily)).</p>


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