## Abstract Coupling recent imaging capabilities with microstructural finite element (Β΅FE) analysis offers a powerful tool to determine bone stiffness and strength. It shows high potential to improve the individual fracture risk prediction, a tool much needed in the diagnosis and treatment of osteo
Mesh scalability in direct finite element simulation of brittle fracture
β Scribed by Antonio Caballero; Arcady Dyskin
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 674 KB
- Volume
- 75
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0013-7944
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β¦ Synopsis
A new approach of dealing with mesh dependence in finite element modelling of fracture processes is introduced. In particular, in brittle fracture modelling, the stress concentration is mesh dependent as the results do not stabilise when refining the mesh. This paper presents an approach based on the explicit incorporation of mesh dependence into the computations. The dependence of the relevant stress is quantified on the finite elements at the crack tip upon the element size; when the dependence approaches a power law with the required accuracy, the mesh is called scalable. If the mesh is scalable and the exponent and pre-factor are known, then the results of the computations can be scaled to the size relevant to the scale of the physical microstructure of the material; the latter while not being modelled directly ultimately controls the fracture propagation. To illustrate this new approach, four 2D examples of a single straight crack loaded under tensile and shear tractions applied either to the external boundary or to the crack faces are considered. It is shown that combining the stresses at the crack tip computed using a set of similar meshes of different densities with the crack tip asymptotic allows accurate recovery of the stress intensity factors.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Results of a numerical simulation, based on an energy consistent moving singularity dynamic finite element procedure, of fast crack propagation and arrest in a high strength steel DCB specimen are presented. The influence of material properties of high strength steel on dynamic crack propagation and