Thermoelastic effects in fracture are generally considered to be negligible at the benefit of the conversion of plastic work into heat. For the case of dynamic crack initiation, the experimental and theoretical emphasis has been put on the temperature rise associated with crack-tip plasticity. Neve
Experimental investigation of transient thermoplastic effects in dynamic fracture
โ Scribed by D. Rittel
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 691 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7683
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
In a recent paper, we investigated the extent to which transient thermoelastic eects could aect dynamic crack initiation [Rittel, D., 1998a. Experimental investigation of transient thermoelastic eects in dynamic fracture. Int. J. Solids and Structures 35(22), 2959ยฑ2973]. In the present paper, we pursue this line of investigation by investigating transient thermoplastic eects. Three characteristic experiments are described which address the assumptions of the isothermal nature of dynamic crack initiation in two representative materials: ductile' polycarbonate and brittle' polymethylmethacrylate.
First, by varying the global (baseline) temperature of dynamic fracture experiments, it is shown that these two materials react quite dierently. The crack-tip temperature of the PC specimen rises signiยฎcantly as evidenced from the failure mode at both the macroscopic and microscopic scales. By contrast, the failure mode of PMMA is apparently unaected by temperatures below its Tg. This experiment demonstrates further that the local crack-tip temperature is likely to be dierent from the baseline temperature.
Next, we investigate the bulk thermomechanical behavior of these two materials to quantitatively assess the temperature rise which accompanies transient adiabatic deformations. This behavior is deemed to be characteristic of that of the process zone material ahead of the crack-tip.
Finally, we present thermal and fractographic results about transient temperature recordings ahead of an adiabatic shear band in a PC specimen loaded in mode II.
These results show that thermomechanical couplings must be taken into account in dynamic fracture investigations. These couplings are related to the loading mode, to the strain levels reached in a typical process zone and also to the thermomechanical response of the speciยฎc material at such strain levels.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Dynamic shear fracture is investigated by a hybrid experimental-numerical approach. The numerical simulations rely on LEFM assumptions and crack-tip stationarity. Violation of these assumptions is related to fracture or adiabatic shear banding and can be used to identify these events in a typical ex