An analytic traction-displacement model for a reinforcing ligament bridging a crack at an arbitrary angle, including elastic, frictional, snubbing, yielding, creep, and fatigue phenomena
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
A micromechanical model is developed that generates analytic expressions for the crack displacement vector given an arbitrary far-field stress state for a crack that is bridged by an array of ligaments oriented at an arbitrary angle with respect to the crack plane. The model is applicable to various materials, e.g., fibrous ceramic composites, or polymer composites reinforced by stitches or z-pins or woven tows, and deals with interfacial friction, enhanced friction due to increased contact pressure (“snubbing”), and the possibility of ligament deflection enabled by yield or damage. The model also conveniently incorporates ligament failure and rate dependent phenomena (fatigue or creep). Adaptability of the model is enabled by the definition of a standard Reference Model, which generates analytic expressions for the crack displacement for given possible yield, ligament deflection, and friction and snubbing effects and is invariant for all geometrical and material choices. The switching on or off and the strengths of all phenomena are governed by assigning values to a handful of material parameters. The material parameters will generally be calibrated against data in a top-down strategy, the model thereby mapping material selection onto engineering fracture via the predicted bridging relationship . The relationship can depend strongly on bi-angular ligament orientation. Yield and deflection can change qualitatively, e.g., by creating fracture surface contact even when includes substantial opening tension. Snubbing has significant effects, including possible stabilization of the pullout of a finite ligament. Since model output is computed via analytic expressions, its speed will support the model's use in large-scale material simulations or as constraining physical information in machine learning algorithms.
期刊介绍:
The aim of Journal of The Mechanics and Physics of Solids is to publish research of the highest quality and of lasting significance on the mechanics of solids. The scope is broad, from fundamental concepts in mechanics to the analysis of novel phenomena and applications. Solids are interpreted broadly to include both hard and soft materials as well as natural and synthetic structures. The approach can be theoretical, experimental or computational.This research activity sits within engineering science and the allied areas of applied mathematics, materials science, bio-mechanics, applied physics, and geophysics.
The Journal was founded in 1952 by Rodney Hill, who was its Editor-in-Chief until 1968. The topics of interest to the Journal evolve with developments in the subject but its basic ethos remains the same: to publish research of the highest quality relating to the mechanics of solids. Thus, emphasis is placed on the development of fundamental concepts of mechanics and novel applications of these concepts based on theoretical, experimental or computational approaches, drawing upon the various branches of engineering science and the allied areas within applied mathematics, materials science, structural engineering, applied physics, and geophysics.
The main purpose of the Journal is to foster scientific understanding of the processes of deformation and mechanical failure of all solid materials, both technological and natural, and the connections between these processes and their underlying physical mechanisms. In this sense, the content of the Journal should reflect the current state of the discipline in analysis, experimental observation, and numerical simulation. In the interest of achieving this goal, authors are encouraged to consider the significance of their contributions for the field of mechanics and the implications of their results, in addition to describing the details of their work.