首页|(106311) Engineering Failure Analysis 138 (2022) 106311Inversion of dislocation densities under mixed mode fracture
(106311) Engineering Failure Analysis 138 (2022) 106311Inversion of dislocation densities under mixed mode fracture
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NSTL
Elsevier
Mixed-mode crack growth is here investigated through experiments and computations for 34X and P2M steels, 7050 aluminium, and Ti-6A1-4V alloys in a compact tension shear (CTS) specimen. In this study, we use the mechanism-based strain gradient (MSG) plasticity theory to evaluate both crack tip dislocation density behaviour and the coupled effect of the material plastic properties and the intrinsic material length on local stress distributions. The constitutive relations are based on Taylor's dislocation model, which allows to gain insights into the role of the increased dislocation density associated with large gradients in plastic strain near cracks. The material model is implemented in a commercial finite element (FE) software package using a user subroutine, and the nonlinear stress intensity factors (SIFs) are evaluated as a function of the intrinsic material length. As a result of the FE calculations of dislocation density distributions, the effects of both the fracture mode and the stress-strain state are determined. Strain gradient effects associated with dislocation hardening mechanisms elevate crack tip stresses relative to conventional plasticity. Dislocation densities, stress fields and nonlinear SIF solutions are determined for experimental curvilinear crack paths by taking into account the transition from the initial Mode II crack to the mixed-mode fracture.
Strain gradient plasticityMixed mode fracturePlastic stress intensity factorFinite element analysisDislocation density
D. Fedotova、R. Khamidullin、V. Shlyannikov
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Institute of Power Engineering and Advanced Technologies, FRC Kazan Scientific Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Kazan, Russia