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Title: Role of Experiments in Mechanics


1
Role of Experiments in Mechanics
  • K. Ravi-Chandar
  • Murray Lecture
  • Society for Experimental Mechanics, June 2004

2
Phases of Investigations
  • DISCOVERY
  • observation
  • understanding
  • CHARACTERIZATION
  • measurement
  • description
  • VERIFICATION
  • recreation
  • scaling

3
Linear Elasticity
  • DISCOVERY
  • Hooke 1676, Mariotte 1700
  • CHARACTERIZATION
  • Theoretical 100 year gap
  • Euler 1767, Young 1807, Cauchy, Poisson
  • Experimental - Wertheim 1842
  • VERIFICATION
  • Continues to the present

4
Verification?
  • Marie Alfred CORNU - 1869
  • interferometry
  • photography
  • accurate, but...
  • Adolf Theodore KUPFFER - 1848
  • enormous resources
  • vast collection of inaccurate results

5
Method of Caustics
  • DISCOVERY
  • Crack tip shadow spots or stress coronas
    Schardin 1937
  • CHARACTERIZATION
  • Mannog 1965, Kalthoff, Theocaris, Rosakis
  • VERIFICATION
  • Rosakis and Ravi-Chandar (static), Ravi-Chandar
    and Knauss (dynamic)

6
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7
Serendipity
  • My intended optical experiment was therefore
    dropped.....This was a case where pertinacity of
    purpose would not have been good tactics.
  • ... Percy Williams BRIDGMAN

8
Role of Experiments?
  • DISCOVERY
  • CHARACTERIZATION
  • VERIFICATION

9
Role of Experiments?
  • It is a fact that Galilean science, not
    Aristotelian logic and metaphysics, made our
    material civilization what it is.
  • - E.T. Bell,
  • The Development of Mathematics, 1943

10
Dynamic Fracture
  • Schardins experiments in glass (1937)
  • Limiting crack speed
  • Crack branching
  • Motts analysis of energy balance (1944)
  • Consideration of kinetic energy
  • Yoffes analysis of stress field (1951)
  • Inertial rearrangement of the stress field

Discovery phase 1937 - 1951
11
Dynamic Fracture
  • Achenbach, Broberg, Eshelby, Freund, Kostrov,
    Nikitin, Rice, Willis,
  • Dally, Fineberg, Irwin, Kalthoff, Knauss,
    Kobayashi, Post and Wells, Ravi-Chandar, Rosakis,
    Shukla,
  • Abraham, Gao, Marder, Needleman, Ortiz,

Characterization phase 1957 present!
12
Analysis of mode I cracks
KI dynamic stress intensity factor
Energy Flux Integral
See for example Freund, Dynamic Fracture
Mechanics, Cambridge, 1990
13
Crack Tip Equation of Motion
G is the dissipation in the fracture process per
unit extension
  • Consequences
  • Dynamics of crack growth crack speed and crack
    path - are governed completely by the wave
    propagation in the continuum
  • Limiting crack speed is the Rayleigh wave speed

See for example, Freund, Dynamic Fracture
Mechanics, Cambridge, 1990
14
Electromagnetic Loading
Ravi-Chandar and Knauss, Int J Fract, 1982
15
Method of Caustics
Homalite-100, electromagnetic loading Ravi-Chandar
and Knauss, Int J Fract, 1984
16
Stationary crack under dynamic loading
17
Dynamic crack initiation toughness
18
Dynamic propagating crack
Homalite-100, electromagnetic loading
Ravi-Chandar and Knauss, Int J Fract, 1984, J
App Mech, 1987
19
Dynamic crack growth criterion
Doll, 1975 Kobayashi et al 1980, 1985 Dally et
al., 1979, 1985 Ravi-Chandar and Knauss, 1984,
1987 Kalthoff, 1985 Hauch and Marder, 1998
20
Experimental observations
  • For vlt0.25 CR, elastodynamic fracture theory
    works quite well
  • Limiting speed v0.5 CR, is not predicted by the
    theory
  • Dynamic square root singular filed not
    established for high crack speeds
  • Crack branching appears

21
Crack Branching
22
Surface roughening
Ravi-Chandar and Knauss, Int J Fract, 1984
23
Fractography
Polymethylmethacrylate Ravi-Chandar and Yang,
JMPS, 1997
24
Dynamic crack growth mechanism
25
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26
Physical models - MD
Farid F. Abraham, D. Brodbeck, R.A. Rafey and
W.E.Rudge, Phys. Rev. Lett. 73, 272 (1994) movie
version can be viewed at http//www.almaden.ibm.c
om/st/computational_science/msmp/fractures/
27
Surface roughening Crack front waves
28
Characterization
Sharon, Cohen and Fineberg, Nature, 2001
29
Mode III loading perturbations
12.7 mm
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, Phys Rev Letters, 2003
30
Ultrasonic wave profile
Wavelength and duration for glass
31
Ultrasonic attenuation in glass
Attenuation -0.1 dB/mm
32
Crack speed measurements
Thin film coating
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, Phys Rev Letters, 2003
33
Shadowgraphy
34
Interaction of shear waves with the growing crack
Specimen K v 480 m/s f 5 MHz
12.7 mm
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, Phys Rev Letters, 2003
35
Crack-wave interaction
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, Phys Rev Letters, 2003
36
Specimen P v 890 m/s f 5 MHz
10 mm
37
12.7 mm
Specimen AC v 440 m/s f 5 MHz
38
Specimen AI v 440 m/s f 20 MHz
10 mm
39
Measurement of surface profiles
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, 2003
40
Surface undulation due to mode III perturbation
Parameters of surface undulation
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, Phys Rev Letters, 2003
41
Attenuation of undulations
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, Phys Rev Letters, 2003
42
Characteristic marks from a surface imperfection
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, Phys Rev Letters, 2003
43
Attenuation of Wallner lines
Bonamy and Ravi-Chandar, Phys Rev Letters, 2003
44
The Tension Test
  • The tensile test is very easily and quickly
    performed, but it is not possible to do much with
    its results, because one does not know what they
    really mean. They are the outcome of a number of
    very complicated physical processes.
  • Emil OROWAN

45
Tension response of polycarbonate
Discovery phase
Buisson and Ravi-Chandar, Polymer, 1990
46
Tension response of polycarbonate
47
Tensile response of polycarbonate
Characterization phase
48
Measurement what is measurable!
Buisson and Ravi-Chandar, Polymer, 1990
49
Buisson and Ravi-Chandar, Polymer, 1990
50
Interpretation
Stress-induced birefringence
Form birefringence
Buisson and Ravi-Chandar, Polymer, 1990
51
Stress-strain relationship
Buisson and Ravi-Chandar, Polymer, 1990
52
Verification phase
53
Numerical Simulation
Lu and Ravi-Chandar, IJSS, 1999
54
Lu and Ravi-Chandar, IJSS, 1999
55
Confined Compression
Ma and Ravi-Chandar, Exp Mech, 2000
56
Analysis of the test configuration
IMPOSED AXIAL STRAIN
CONTINUITY Requires the specimen should have the
same displacement and radial strain as the
cylinder. EQUILIBRIUM Requires that the hoop
stress in the specimen should be equal to the
radial stress, assuming homogeneity of stresses.
DEFORMATION OF A CYLINDER UNDER INTERNAL PRESSURE 
Ma and Ravi-Chandar, Exp Mech, 2000
57
Strain and stress in the specimen
The state of the deformation and stress in the
specimen is completely determined. It should be
possible to extract constitutive information from
such an experiment.
Ma and Ravi-Chandar, Exp Mech, 2000
58
Interpretation of measurements
SHEAR RESPONSE
BULK RESPONSE
Ravi-Chandar and Ma, MTDM, 2000
59
Volumetric response
Ravi-Chandar and Ma, MTDM, 2000
60
Shear response
Ravi-Chandar and Ma, MTDM, 2000
61
Role of Experiments
  • DISCOVERY
  • CHARACTERIZATION
  • VERIFICATION

62
Thanks
63
AcknowledgmentsWolfgan
g KnaussCalifornia Institute of
TechnologyStelios Kyriakides, Ken Liechti, Mark
Mear, Greg RodinThe University of Texas at
AustinAres RosakisCalifornia Institute of
TechnologyKamel Salama, Ken White,
VipulanandanUniversity of HoustonDaniel
BonamyCEA Saclay, FranceJohn DempseyClarkson
UniversityDimitris LagoudasTexas AM
UniversityEckhardt SchneiderInstitut fur
zerstorungsfrie prufverfahrenL.
MahadevanHarvard University National Science
FoundationAir Force Office of Scientific
ResearchArmy Research OfficeOffice of Naval
ResearchTexas Center for SuperconductivityInst
itute for Advanced TechnologyFraunhofer
Institut fur zerstorungsfreie Prufverfahren
Graduate Students Terapat Apicharttabrut Marc
BalzanoGerard Buisson Bharathi
ChandrakarAbhijit Dhumne Hui FangPaul
Foltyn William HoffmanHwai-Jiang Jong Zaitao
LiJaeyoung Lim Bisen Lin Kuen-der Lin Hanfei
LuJinyang Lu Zhonghui MaRavi Mahajan John
OlivasJames Piedra Deva PonnusamyShyam
Potti Dan QvaleShriram Ramanathan K.P.
ReddyFrank Richter Tin-Jong ShueChristophe
Taudou Renjun WangRick Watkins Yan XiaBo
Yang Yanqui Zhang
64
Discovery
  • This work has not been done as a result of
    preconceived ideas and as an end we proposed to
    reach from the first. It has presented itself to
    us only in consequence of varied experiments
    realized in the first place in complicated
    circumstances which we have striven to reduce
    more and more to conditions which are simple and
    such as to permit the laws of the phenomena to be
    studied easily.
  • ....Henri Edouard TRESCA, 1868

65
Characterization
  • Measure what is measurable, and make measurable
    what is not so.
  • - Galileo GALILEI

66
Verification
  • it is obvious that an experimentist does not
    verify theories. ... it is fallacious to
    presume that a correlation between data and
    prediction implies the validity of any one set of
    such assumptions.
  • - James F. BELL, Encyclopedia of Physics, 1973
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