4.7 Article

T-stress effects on steady crack growth in a thin, ductile plate under small-scale yielding conditions: Three-dimensional modeling

Journal

ENGINEERING FRACTURE MECHANICS
Volume 78, Issue 6, Pages 1182-1200

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.engfracmech.2010.11.018

Keywords

T-stress; Constraint effects; Steady crack growth; Fracture mechanics; Non-dimensional scaling; Three-dimensional effects; Ductile void growth

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Illinois
  2. NASA Marshall Space Flight Center [NNM04AA37G]
  3. Naval Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division [N00167-02-C-0076]

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The non-singular T-stress provides a first-order estimate of geometry and loading mode, e.g. tension vs. bending, effects on elastic-plastic, crack-front fields under mode I conditions. The T-stress has a pronounced effect on measured crack growth resistance curves for ductile metals - trends most computational models confirm using a two-dimensional setting. This work examines T-stress effects on three-dimensional (3D), elastic-plastic fields surrounding a steadily advancing crack for a moderately hardening material in the framework of a 3D, small-scale yielding boundary-layer model. A flat, straight crack front advances at a constant quasi-static rate under near invariant local and global mode I loading. The boundary-layer model has thickness B that defines the only geometric lengthscale. The material flow properties and (local) toughness combine to limit the in-plane plastic-zone size during steady growth to at most a few multiples of the thickness (conditions obtainable, for example, in large, thin aluminum components). The computational model requires no crack growth criterion; rather, the crack front extends steadily at constant values of the plane-stress displacements imposed on the remote boundary for the specified far-field stress intensity factor and T-stress. The specific numerical results presented demonstrate similarity scaling of the 3D near-front stresses in terms of two non-dimensional loading parameters. The analyses reveal a strong effect of T-stress on key stress and strain quantities for low loading levels and less effect for higher loading levels, where much of the plastic zone experiences plane-stress conditions. To understand the combined effects of T-stress on stresses and plastic strain levels, normalized values from a simple void-growth model, computed over the crack plane for low loading, clearly reveal the tendency for crack-front tunneling, shear-lip formation near the outside surfaces, and a minimum steady-state fracture toughness for T=0 loading. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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