Lecture #19 Failure & Fracture

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Failure criteria for laminated composites
Advertisements

FRACTURE, FAILURE AND FATIGUE Catastrophic failure in materials resulting from crack development.
CHAPTER 4: FRACTURE The separation or fragmentation of a solid body into two or more parts, under the action of stresses, is called fracture. Fracture.
LECTURER5 Fracture Brittle Fracture Ductile Fracture Fatigue Fracture
Fracture and Failure Theory. Defining Failure Failure can be defined in a variety of ways: Unable to perform the to a given criteria Fracture Yielding.
3 – Fracture of Materials
Chapter 7 Fracture: Macroscopic Aspects. Goofy Duck Analog for Modes of Crack Loading “Goofy duck” analog for three modes of crack loading. (a) Crack/beak.
ME 240: Introduction to Engineering Materials Chapter 8. Failure 8.1 CHAPTER 8.
FRACTURE Fracture is the separation, or fragmentation, of a solid body into two or more parts under the action of stress. Process of fracture- with two.
Fracture Mechanics Overview & Basics
Crack Nucleation and Propagation
Fracture Specimen To Visualize whether a crack of given length in a material of known fracture toughness is dangerous, because it will propagate to given.
Design of Concrete Structure I
Engineering materials lecture #14
Fracture, Fatigue, Corrosion and Failure Analysis of Medical Devices Health Canada, March 7, 2012 Brad James Ph.D., P.E. Exponent Failure Analysis.
Complex Static Stresses and Torsion
Failure Theories Why do parts fail? What kind of stresses?
Stresses in Thin-walled Pressure Vessels (I)
Unit 3: Solid mechanics An Introduction to Mechanical Engineering: Part Two Solid mechanics Learning summary By the end of this chapter you should have.
Joints and Shear Fractures
Tests of Hardened Concrete. Stress Balance for equilibrium  loads = external forces  internal forces = stress Axial tension.
Jiangyu Li, University of Washington Lecture 18 Impact Test and Stress Concentration Mechanical Behavior of Materials Section 4.8, 8.1, 8.2 Jiangyu Li.
THEORIES OF FAILURE THEORIES OF FAILURE FOR DUCTILE MATERIALS
Chapter 5, Part B Failure Modes
Lab 6B -Fracture Toughness and Fracture Toughness-limited Design Big bang for the buck!
Thermal Strains and Element of the Theory of Plasticity
ASPECTS OF MATERIALS FAILURE
Principal Stresses and Strain and Theories of Failure
Failures Resulting from Static Loading
Mechanical Properties
Chapter Outline Shigley’s Mechanical Engineering Design.
Ken Youssefi Mechanical Engineering Dept., SJSU 1 Failure Theories – Static Loads Static load – a stationary load that is gradually applied having an unchanging.
Mechanical Properties
6. Elastic-Plastic Fracture Mechanics
1 ME383 Modern Manufacturing Practices Lecture Note #3 Stress-Strain & Yield Criteria Dr. Y.B. Guo Mechanical Engineering The University of Alabama.
Design Stress & Fatigue
Welding Design 1998/MJ1/MatJoin2/1 Design. Lesson Objectives When you finish this lesson you will understand: Mechanical and Physical Properties (structure.
1 Design for Different Type of Loading Lecture Notes Dr. Rakhmad Arief Siregar Kolej Universiti Kejuruteraan Utara Malaysia Machine Element in Mechanical.
Failure Criteria and stress concentration
Theories of Failure Failure of a member is defined as one of two conditions. 1.Fracture of the material of which the member is made. This type of failure.
Jiangyu Li, University of Washington Yielding and Failure Criteria Plasticity Fracture Fatigue Jiangyu Li University of Washington Mechanics of Materials.
Yield point and yield stress or strength,  y Offset method finds this yield stress by assuming a 0.2 % strain (.002).002 Big yielding region, large elongation.
Course No.: MEBF ZC342 MACHINE DESIGN
Mechanics of Materials(ME-294) Lecture 12: YIELD and Failure CRITERIA.
Exam 2 Grade Distribution. Stress-strain behavior (Room T): Ideal vs Real Materials TS
MAE 322 Machine Design Lecture 2
Problems 1. A large plate is fabricated from a steel alloy that has a plane strain fracture toughness of 82.4MPa√m. If, during service use, the plate is.
EGM 5653 Advanced Mechanics of Materials
Fracture Mechanics and Size Effect of Concrete
Lab #3: Strat Columns: Draw to scale Lab #3: Strat Columns: Draw to scale Includes: (left to right) Age (era and period) Name of unit Thickness of unit.
Fracture of Solids Theoretical tensile strength of a solid U(r) a r
MIT Amorphous Materials 8: Mechanical Properties
Failure and Failure Theories:
Basic principles of metallic fracture
Machine Design: An Overview
Mechanical Properties
Introduction We select materials for many components and applications by matching the properties of the material to the service condition required of the.
Types of Fracture.
Theories of Failure Failure of a member is defined as one of two conditions. 1. Fracture of the material of which the member is made. This type of failure.
Mechanical Properties of Metals
Theories of Failure Failure of a member is defined as one of two conditions. 1. Fracture of the material of which the member is made. This type of failure.
Mechanics of Materials Lab
( BDA 3033 ) CHAPTER 6 Theories of Elastic Failures
Fracture of Solids Theoretical tensile strength of a solid U(r) a r
( BDA 3033 ) CHAPTER 6 Theories of Elastic Failures
Mechanical Properties: 2
Mechanical Properties of Metals
Mechanical Failure(파괴)
Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, All Rights Reserved
Yielding And Fracture Under Combine Stresses
Presentation transcript:

Lecture #19 Failure & Fracture

Strength Theories Failure Theories Fracture Mechanics

Failure = no longer able to perform design function FRACTURE in brittle materials YIELDING / excessive deformation in ductile materials

Stages of Cracking Failure Behavior of concrete in compression. Discuss the development of cracking as a function of stress level.

Static Fatigue If a constant load is maintained between 75% and 100% of the strength, failure will eventually occur, because the unstable cracks are given sufficient time to propagate catastrophically.

Bond and Microcracking There is more linearity stress-strain between the paste and aggregates in high strength concrete rather than normal strength concrete because of the reduced micro-cracking. The same is true of the light weight concrete.

Stress Conditions Mechanical testing under simple stress conditions Design requires prediction of failure for complex stress conditions principal stresses (s1 > s2 > s3) biaxial stress state (s3=0)

Strength Envelope For Concrete

Simple Failure Theories Rankine s1=sft St. Venant e1= eft neither agree w/ experimental data either are rarely used

Complex Failure Theories Max Shear Stress (Tresca) ductile materials tmax= ty s1-s3= sy s2-s3= sy s1-s2= sy sy/2 = max shear stress at yield 2 = y If 2 > 1 > 0 1- 2 = -y If 1< 0 and 2 > 0 1 = y If 1 > 2 > 0 2 = -y If 1 < 2 < 0 1- 2 = y If 1> 0 and 2 < 0 1 = -y If 2 < 1 < 0

Complex Failure Theories Max Distortional Strain Energy (octahedral shear stress, von Mises) best agreement with experimental data hydrostatic + distortional principal stresses

Failure Theories Mohr’s Strength both yielding & fracture sft  sfc OR

Failure Theories Mohr’s Strength

Failure Envelope Mohr’s Strength failure envelope

Effect of Confinement

Comparison of Failure Theories equivalent to Max Shear Stress if sft=sfc ductile and modified if sft  sfc (brittle)

concentrated stress at crack tip (see Fig. 6.7) Fracture Mechanics max stress criterion not sufficient relationships between applied stress, crack size, and fracture toughness probability of failure, critical crack size (size effect, variability of material properties) focus on linear fracture mechanics, tensile loading, brittle materials all materials contain flaws, defects, cracks concentrated stress at crack tip (see Fig. 6.7)

Crack Growth

Fracture Mechanics Theoretical cohesive strength Griffith Theory fracture work resisted by energy to create two new crack surfaces Griffith Theory flaw / crack size sensitivity

Fracture Mechanics stress concentration at crack tip (see Fig 6.9) for C>>

Stress Intensity Factor x Crack Tip Stress Distribution

Fracture Mechanics Three modes of crack opening Focus on Mode I for brittle materials

Fracture Mechanics

Fracture Mechanics

Fracture Mechanics KI = stress intensity factor = Fs(pC)1/2 F is a geometry factor for specimens of finite size KI = KIC OR GI=GIC unstable fracture KIC= Critical Stress Intensity Factor = Fracture Toughness GI=strain energy release rate (GIC=critical)

2 d KI c c 2 a Alpha = a/d F Alpha

Flexure (Bending) Fracture Yielding similar as in tension brittle materials nonlinear s distribution initiates as tensile failure flexural strength > tensile strength Yielding similar as in tension ductile materials first @ extreme fiber progresses inward gradual change masks proportional limit In a brittle material, nonlinearity of the stress distribution contributes to the flexure strength exceeding the tensile strength by approximately 50%.

Failure Criterion

Linear Fracture Mechanics Non-Linear Fracture Mechanics

a cf Crack Process Zone KI d Alpha = a/d

Fracture specimens

Specimen Apparatus

Specimen Preparation

Test Specimens

Determination of Fracture Parameters sN = cn KIf / [g’(a0)cf + g(a0)d]1/2 sN = cn P/(sr) - split tensile (eq. 5.12) sN = cn P/(bd) - beam (eq. 5.13) Linear Regression Y = AX + B Y = cn2 / [g’(a0) sN2] X = g(a0) d / g’(a0) KIf = 1 / A1/2 cf = B / A

Application of Fracture Method Strength Determination g(a ) = c2nF2(a) Basic Geometry - split tensile cn = 2/p ;  = (1) 0.0, (2) 0.1667, or (3) 0.6667 (1) F(a) = 0.964; g(a ) = 0.0; g’(a ) = 2.9195 (2) F(a) = 0.964 - 0.026a + 1.472a2 - 0.256a3 F() = 0.9994, g(a ) = 0.5230; g’(a ) = 3.6023 (3) F(a) = 2.849 - 10.451a + 22.938a2 - 14.940a3 F() = 1.6497, g(a ) = 5.6997; g’(a ) = 10.0214 Basic Geometry - beam cn = 1.5 s/d ;  = a/d F(a) = 1.122 - 1.40a + 7.33a2 - 13.08a3 + 14.0a4

Failure Criterion

Applications of Fracture Parameters Strength Determination sN = cn KIf / [g’(a0)cf + g(a0)d]1/2

Applications of Fracture Parameters Strength Determination Size effect on strength ( a0 = 0.2; Bfu = 3.9 MPa = 566 psi; da = 25.4 mm = 1 in) log (d/da) Specimen or structure size log (sN / Bfu) sN d (mm or inch) (MPa or psi) 0.70 127 or 5 - 0.18 2.57 or 373 1.00 305 or 12 - 0.26 2.15 or 312 1.30 507 or 20 - 0.35 1.75 or 254