Title: FRACTURE
1FRACTURE
- Brittle Fracture
- Ductile to Brittle transition
Fracture Mechanics T.L. Anderson CRC Press,
Boca Raton, USA (1995)
2Continuity of the structure
Welding instead of riveting
Residual stress
BreakingofLiberty Ships
Microcracks
Cold waters
High sulphur in steel
3Ductile
Fracture
Brittle
Temperature
Factors affecting fracture
Strain rate
State of stress
4Behaviour described Terms Used Terms Used
Crystallographic mode Shear Cleavage
Appearance of Fracture surface Fibrous Granular / bright
Strain to fracture Ductile Brittle
Path Transgranular Intergranular
5Tension
Torsion
Fatigue
Conditions of fracture
Creep
Low temperature Brittle fracture
Temper embrittlement
Hydrogen embrittlement
6Types of failure
Low Temperature
Promoted by
High Strain rate
Triaxial state of State of stress
- Brittle fracture
- Little or no deformation
- Observed in single crystals and polycrystals
- Have been observed in BCC and HCP metals but not
in FCC metals
7Slip plane
- Shear fracture of ductile single crystals
- Not observed in polycrystals
8- Completely ductile fracture of polycrystals ?
rupture - Very ductile metals like gold and lead behave
like this
9- Ductile fracture of usual polycrystals
- Cup and cone fracture
- Necking leads to triaxial state of stress
- Cracks nucleate at brittle particles (void
formation at the matrix-particle interface)
10Theoretical shear strength and cracks
- The theoretical shear strength (to break bonds
and cause fracture) of perfect crystals (E /
6) - Strength of real materials (E / 100 to E
/1000) - Tiny cracks are responsible for this
- Cracks play the same role in fracture (of
weakening) as dislocations play for deformation
Cohesive force
Applied Force (F) ?
r ?
a0
11Characterization of Cracks
2a
a
- Surface or interior
- Crack length
- Crack orientation with respect to geometry and
loading - Crack tip radius
12Crack growth and failure
Griffith
Energy based
Crack growth criteria
Stress based
Inglis
13It should be energetically favorable
For growth of crack
Sufficient stress concentration should exist at
crack tip to break bonds
14- Brittle fracture ? ? cracks are sharp no
crack tip blunting ? No energy spent in plastic
deformation at the crack tip
15Griffiths criterion for brittle crack propagation
?U ?
c ?
16Increasing stress
?U ?
c ?
Griffith
By some abracadabra
At constant c ( c ? crack length)when ?
exceeds ?f then specimen fails
At constant stresswhen c gt c by instantaneous
nucleation then specimen fails
17To derive c we differentiated w.r.tc keeping ?
constant
c ?
Fracture
stable
?0
?0
? ?
- If a crack of length c nucleates
instantaneously then it can grow with
decreasing energy ? sees a energy downhill - On increasing stress the critical crack size
decreases
18Stress criterion for crack propagation
- Cracks have a sharp tip and lead to stress
concentration
?0
- ?0 ? applied stress
- ?max ? stress at crack tip
- ? ? crack tip radius
For a circular hole
? c
19 Work done by crack tip stresses to create a
crack (/grow an existing crack) Energy of
surfaces formed
After lot of approximations
Inglis
20Griffith versus Inglis
Inglis
Griffith
21Rajesh Prasads Diagrams
Validity domains for brittle fracture criteria
Blunt cracks
Validityregion for StresscriterionInglis
? c
Validityregion for EnergycriterionGriffith
c ?
Sharp cracks
? gt c
a0
3a0
? ?
Approximate border for changeover of criterion
Sharpest possible crack
22Safety regions applying Griffiths criterion alone
c ?
Unsafe
c
Safe
? ?
a0
23Safety regions applying Ingliss criterion alone
c ?
Safe
Unsafe
? ?
a0
24Griffith unsafeInglis unsafe? unsafe
Griffith unsafeInglis safe? safe
c ?
c
Griffith safeInglis unsafe? unsafe
Griffith safeInglis unsafe? safe
Griffith safeInglis safe? safe
? ?
a0
3a0
25Ductile brittle transition
- Deformation should be continuous across grain
boundary in polycrystals for their ductile
behaviour ? 5 independent slip systems
required (absent in HCP and ionic materials) - FCC crystals remain ductile upto 0 K
- Common BCC metals become brittle at low
temperatures or at v.high strain rates
- Ductile ? ?y lt ?f ? yields before fracture
- Brittle ? ?y gt ?f ? fractures before
yielding
26Griffith
?y
Inglis
?f
?f , ?y ?
Ductile
Brittle
T ?
DBTT
Ductile ? yields before fracture
Brittle ? fractures before yield
27?f
?f , ?y ?
?y (BCC)
?y (FCC)
T ?
DBTT
No DBTT
28Griffith versus Hall-Petch
Hall-Petch
Griffith
29Grain size dependence of DBTT
gt
T1
T2
T2
T1
?f
T1
?y
T2
?f , ?y ?
Finer size
Large size
d-½ ?
DBT
Finer grain size has higher DBTT ? better
30Grain size dependence of DBTT- simplified version
- ?f ?? f(T)
gt
T1
T2
T1
?f
T1
?y
T2
?f , ?y ?
Finer size
d-½ ?
DBT
Finer grain size has lower DBTT ? better
31Protection against brittle fracture
- ?? ? ?f ? ? done by chemical adsorbtion of
molecules on the crack surfaces - Removal of surface cracks ? etching of
glass (followed by resin cover) - Introducing compressive stresses on the
surface ? Surface of molten glass solidified by
cold air followed by solidification of the
bulk (tempered glass) ? fracture strength can
be increased 2-3 times ? Ion exchange method ?
smaller cations like Na in sodium silicate
glass are replaced by larger cations like K on
the surface of glass ? higher compressive
stresses than tempering ? Shot peening ?
Carburizing and Nitriding ? Pre-stressed concrete
32- Cracks developed during grinding of ceramics
extend upto one grain ? use fine grained
ceramics (grain size 0.1 ??m) - Avoid brittle continuous phase along the grain
boundaries ? path for intergranular fracture
(e.g. iron sulphide film along grain boundaries
in steels ? Mn added to steel to form spherical
manganese sulphide)
33Ductile fracture
- Ductile fracture ? ? Crack tip blunting by
plastic deformation at tip ? Energy spent in
plastic deformation at the crack tip
?y
Schematic
? ?
r ?
Blunted crack
Sharp crack
r ? distance from the crack tip
34Orowans modification to the Griffiths equation
to include plastic energy
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