Structural analysis

Fracture mechanics

Fracture mechanics is the field of mechanics concerned with the study of the propagation of cracks in materials. It uses methods of analytical solid mechanics to calculate the driving force on a crack and those of experimental solid mechanics to characterize the material's resistance to fracture. Theoretically, the stress ahead of a sharp crack tip becomes infinite and cannot be used to describe the state around a crack. Fracture mechanics is used to characterise the loads on a crack, typically using a single parameter to describe the complete loading state at the crack tip. A number of different parameters have been developed. When the plastic zone at the tip of the crack is small relative to the crack length the stress state at the crack tip is the result of elastic forces within the material and is termed linear elastic fracture mechanics (LEFM) and can be characterised using the stress intensity factor . Although the load on a crack can be arbitrary, in 1957 G. Irwin found any state could be reduced to a combination of three independent stress intensity factors: * Mode I – Opening mode (a tensile stress normal to the plane of the crack), * Mode II – Sliding mode (a shear stress acting parallel to the plane of the crack and perpendicular to the crack front), and * Mode III – Tearing mode (a shear stress acting parallel to the plane of the crack and parallel to the crack front). When the size of the plastic zone at the crack tip is too large, elastic-plastic fracture mechanics can be used with parameters such as the J-integral or the crack tip opening displacement. The characterising parameter describes the state of the crack tip which can then be related to experimental conditions to ensure similitude. Crack growth occurs when the parameters typically exceed certain critical values. Corrosion may cause a crack to slowly grow when the stress corrosion stress intensity threshold is exceeded. Similarly, small flaws may result in crack growth when subjected to cyclic loading. Known as fatigue, it was found that for long cracks, the rate of growth is largely governed by the range of the stress intensity experienced by the crack due to the applied loading. Fast fracture will occur when the stress intensity exceeds the fracture toughness of the material. The prediction of crack growth is at the heart of the damage tolerance mechanical design discipline. (Wikipedia).

Fracture mechanics
Video thumbnail

Comparing the failure of different materials

Fracture is the separation of a body into 2 or more pieces due to stress. Fracture occurs differently in different materials! In some cases, it might shatter into many pieces, while in others it might break into just two. In some cases, the fracture occurs via spontaneous crack propagation

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

Video thumbnail

An Introduction to Stress and Strain

This video is an introduction to stress and strain, which are fundamental concepts that are used to describe how an object responds to externally applied loads. Stress is a measure of the distribution of internal forces that develop within a body to resist these applied loads. There are

From playlist Mechanics of Materials / Strength of Materials

Video thumbnail

What are stress concentrators?

Flaws typically exist in materials. Maybe on the surface, maybe on the interior. These flaws have a real impact on the fracture or yield strength of the materials. Why? Early fracture mechanics scientists recognized that in the vicinity of the crack tip there was a stress magnification. Th

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

Video thumbnail

Understanding Fatigue Failure and S-N Curves

Fatigue failure is a failure mechanism which results from the formation and growth of cracks under repeated cyclic stress loading, leading to fracture. It can result in failure at stress levels well below the material yield or ultimate strengths. In this video I discuss the mechanisms beh

From playlist Mechanics of Materials / Strength of Materials

Video thumbnail

Fracture Toughness

Provides a basic understanding of a material's resistance to fracturing.

From playlist TAMU: Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering | CosmoLearning.org

Video thumbnail

Stress-strain curves and modulus of elasticity

When we apply a stress to a material we get a strain. But how much? The amount of strain will be proportional to the modulus of elasticity also known as Young's modulus or the materials stiffness. Yount's modulus is the slope of the stress vs strain curve during the elastic deformation reg

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

Video thumbnail

Derivation of Griffith Fracture Theory

Once we realize that stress concentrators exist, the next step is to consider how they may exist in a material and how these will influence fracture. A. A. Griffith did some of the pioneering work in this area, alongside others. A key thing to recognize is that all materials have flaws and

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

Video thumbnail

Fracture Mechanics

0:00 stress concentrators 3:24 stress intensity factor 5:07 Griffith theory of brittle fracture brief origin 10:20 Griffith fracture equation 11:12 Y, geometric crack size parameter 13:46 KIc fracture toughness 17:01 fracture critical flaw size example question 21:11 general characteristic

From playlist Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering Fall 2018

Video thumbnail

Mod-17 Lec-43 Mechanical Properties of Ceramic Materials (Contd.)

Advanced ceramics for strategic applications by Prof. H.S. Maiti,Department of Metallurgy and Material Science,IIT Kharagpur.For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.ac.in

From playlist IIT Kharagpur: Advanced Ceramics for Strategic Applications | CosmoLearning.org Materials Science

Video thumbnail

Mod-17 Lec-44 Mechanical Properties of Ceramic Materials ( Contd.)

Advanced ceramics for strategic applications by Prof. H.S. Maiti,Department of Metallurgy and Material Science,IIT Kharagpur.For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.ac.in

From playlist IIT Kharagpur: Advanced Ceramics for Strategic Applications | CosmoLearning.org Materials Science

Video thumbnail

"On the Mechanical Response of Structural Glass" by Mu'Tasem Shehadeh

This presentation focuses on the mechanical properties of structural glass. The elasto-plastic deformation and fracture mechanisms under static and dynamic loading conditions will be presented. We will also discuss the effect of glass composition on the process of plastic deformation and c

From playlist On Broken Glass (Spring 2021)

Video thumbnail

Robert Lipton: Nonlocal theories for free crack propagation in brittle materials (Lecture 1)

The dynamic fracture of brittle solids is a particularly interesting collective interaction connecting both large and small length scales. Apply enough stress or strain to a sample of brittle material and one eventually snaps bonds at the atomistic scale leading to fracture of the macrosco

From playlist HIM Lectures: Trimester Program "Multiscale Problems"

Video thumbnail

Mod-17 Lec-45 Mechanical Properties of Ceramic Materials ( Contd.)

Advanced ceramics for strategic applications by Prof. H.S. Maiti,Department of Metallurgy and Material Science,IIT Kharagpur.For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.ac.in

From playlist IIT Kharagpur: Advanced Ceramics for Strategic Applications | CosmoLearning.org Materials Science

Video thumbnail

Jiun-Shyan Chen: Fracture to Damage Multiscale Mechanics and Modeling of Brittle Materials

Jiun-Shyan Chen: Fracture to Damage Multiscale Mechanics and Modeling of Brittle Materials The lecture was held within the framework of the Hausdorff Trimester Program Multiscale Problems: Workshop on Non-local Material Models and Concurrent Multiscale Methods. (3 - 7.04.2017) The failur

From playlist HIM Lectures: Trimester Program "Multiscale Problems"

Video thumbnail

Mod-17 Lec-42 Mechanical Properties of Ceramic Materials

Advanced ceramics for strategic applications by Prof. H.S. Maiti,Department of Metallurgy and Material Science,IIT Kharagpur.For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.ac.in

From playlist IIT Kharagpur: Advanced Ceramics for Strategic Applications | CosmoLearning.org Materials Science

Video thumbnail

Day 10 Fracture toughness

0:00 review of midterm 1 scores 2:28 introduction to fracture and failure 2:47 banana liquid nitrogen and strain rate demo 8:38 midterm scaling and learning objectives 10:10 ductile vs brittle failure 14:24 fractography of ductile vs brittle failure 17:07 stress multipliers (concentrators)

From playlist Introduction to Materials Science and Engineering Fall 2017

Video thumbnail

Mod-18 Lec-46 Structural Ceramics Materials

Advanced ceramics for strategic applications by Prof. H.S. Maiti,Department of Metallurgy and Material Science,IIT Kharagpur.For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.ac.in

From playlist IIT Kharagpur: Advanced Ceramics for Strategic Applications | CosmoLearning.org Materials Science

Video thumbnail

Fracture characteristics of ceramics, polymers, and metals

Metals, polymers, and ceramics have many differences when it comes to fracture apart from simple ductile/brittle nature. Ceramics tend to have very low fracture toughness values and are susceptible to slow crack growth via stress corrosion, for example. They also tend to vary more in yield

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

Video thumbnail

Material behavior (introduction)

While we will use the approximation of a linear elastic solid throughout this course, this video is a quick peak at real material behavior. Created for Mechanics of Solids and Structures course at Olin College.

From playlist Lectures for mechanics of solids and structures

Video thumbnail

Ductile vs Brittle fracture and Griffith Fracture

0:00 midterm questions 4:00 brittle vs ductile demo 14:30 fractography 16:48 fracture mechanics basics 31:31 Griffith fracture equation 42:00 example problem with brittle fracture

From playlist Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering Fall 2019

Related pages

Young's modulus | Poisson's ratio | Fatigue (material) | Energy | Structural load | Dissipation | Cauchy stress tensor