Stress intensity factor

Polar coordinates at the crack tip.

In fracture mechanics, the stress intensity factor (K) is used to predict the stress state ("stress intensity") near the tip of a crack or notch caused by a remote load or residual stresses.[1] It is a theoretical construct usually applied to a homogeneous, linear elastic material and is useful for providing a failure criterion for brittle materials, and is a critical technique in the discipline of damage tolerance. The concept can also be applied to materials that exhibit small-scale yielding at a crack tip.

The magnitude of K depends on specimen geometry, the size and location of the crack or notch, and the magnitude and the distribution of loads on the material. It can be written as:[2][3]

where is a specimen geometry dependent function of the crack length, a, and the specimen width, W, and σ is the applied stress.

Linear elastic theory predicts that the stress distribution () near the crack tip, in polar coordinates () with origin at the crack tip, has the form [4]

where K is the stress intensity factor (with units of stress × length1/2) and is a dimensionless quantity that varies with the load and geometry. Theoretically, as r goes to 0, the stress goes to resulting in a stress singularity.[5] Practically however, this relation breaks down very close to the tip (small r) because plasticity typically occurs at stresses exceeding the material's yield strength and the linear elastic solution is no longer applicable. Nonetheless, if the crack-tip plastic zone is small in comparison to the crack length, the asymptotic stress distribution near the crack tip is still applicable.

  1. ^ Anderson, T. L. (2005). Fracture mechanics: fundamentals and applications. CRC Press.
  2. ^ Soboyejo, W. O. (2003). "11.6.2 Crack Driving Force and Concept of Similitude". Mechanical properties of engineered materials. Marcel Dekker. ISBN 0-8247-8900-8. OCLC 300921090.
  3. ^ Janssen, M. (Michael) (2004). Fracture mechanics. Zuidema, J. (Jan), Wanhill, R. J. H. (2nd ed.). London: Spon Press. p. 41. ISBN 0-203-59686-2. OCLC 57491375.
  4. ^ Hiroshi Tada; P. C. Paris; George R. Irwin (February 2000). The Stress Analysis of Cracks Handbook (3rd ed.). American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
  5. ^ Liu, M.; et al. (2015). "An improved semi-analytical solution for stress at round-tip notches" (PDF). Engineering Fracture Mechanics. 149: 134–143. doi:10.1016/j.engfracmech.2015.10.004. S2CID 51902898.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Nelliwinne