Implications of Realistic Fracture Criteria on Crack Morphology
Bj{\o}rn Skjetne, Alex Hansen

TL;DR
This study investigates how incorporating realistic fracture criteria, including shear forces, significantly influences crack morphology in numerical simulations, aligning results more closely with experimental observations.
Contribution
It introduces and compares fracture criteria consistent with elasticity theory, highlighting the importance of shear forces in crack morphology simulations.
Findings
Including shear forces alters crack morphology significantly.
The roughness exponent closely matches experimental values when realistic criteria are used.
Small-scale fracture behavior may require different criteria due to cleavage effects.
Abstract
We study the effects realistic fracture criteria have on crack morphology obtained in numerical simulations with a stochastic discrete element method. Results are obtained with two criteria which are consistent with the theory of elasticity and compared with previous results using the original criterion, chosen when the method was first published, The conventional choice has been to consider the combined loading as an interaction between bending and tensile forces only, leaving out shear forces altogether. Moreover the combination of bending and tension used in the old criterion is correct only for plastic deformations. Our results show that the inclusion of shear forces have a profound effect on crack morphology. We consider two types of external loading, torsion applied to a circular cylinder and tension applied to a cube. In the tensile case, the exponent which characterises scaling…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Research and Discoveries · Probabilistic and Robust Engineering Design · Theoretical and Computational Physics
