4.6 Article

Finite Element Simulation of a Crack Growth in the Presence of a Hole in the Vicinity of the Crack Trajectory

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15010363

Keywords

finite element method; linear elastic fracture mechanics; stress intensity factors; holes; ANSYS Mechanical R19; 2; SMART crack growth

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This paper presents a numerical simulation of crack growth path and stress intensity factors for linear elastic material, investigating the influence of hole positions and pre-crack locations on crack growth direction. The study utilized ANSYS Mechanical R19.2 with SMART technology, which significantly reduces meshing time. Results show that the presence of a hole can cause deviation in crack path, potentially leading to crack arrest.
The aim of this paper was to present a numerical simulation of a crack growth path and associated stress intensity factors (SIFs) for linear elastic material. The influence of the holes' position and pre-crack locations in the crack growth direction were investigated. For this purpose, ANSYS Mechanical R19.2 was introduced with the use of a new feature known as Separating Morphing and Adaptive Remeshing Technology (SMART) dependent on the Unstructured Mesh Method (UMM), which can reduce the meshing time from up to several days to a few minutes, eliminating long preprocessing sessions. The presence of a hole near a propagating crack causes a deviation in the crack path. If the hole is close enough to the crack path, the crack may stop at the edge of the hole, resulting in crack arrest. The present study was carried out for two geometries, namely a cracked plate with four holes and a plate with a circular hole, and an edge crack with different pre-crack locations. Under linear elastic fracture mechanics (LEFM), the maximum circumferential stress criterion is applied as a direction criterion. Depending on the position of the hole, the results reveal that the crack propagates in the direction of the hole due to the uneven stresses at the crack tip, which are consequences of the hole's influence. The results of this modeling are validated in terms of crack growth trajectories and SIFs by several crack growth studies reported in the literature that show trustworthy results.

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