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Get Free AccessThis chapter describes the mixed mode cracking in layered materials. There is ample experimental evidence that cracks in brittle, isotropic, homogeneous materials propagate such that pure mode I conditions are maintained at the crack tip. An unloaded crack subsequently subject to a combination of modes I and II will initiate growth by kinking in such a direction that the advancing tip is in mode I. The chapter also elaborates some of the basic results on the characterization of crack tip fields and on the specification of interface toughness. The competition between crack advance within the interface and kinking out of the interface depends on the relative toughness of the interface to that of the adjoining material. The interface stress intensity factors play precisely the same role as their counterparts in elastic fracture mechanics for homogeneous, isotropic solids. When an interface between a bimaterial system is actually a very thin layer of a third phase, the details of the cracking morphology in the thin interface layer can also play a role in determining the mixed mode toughness. The elasticity solutions for cracks in multilayers are also elaborated.
John W. Hutchinson, Zhigang Suo (1991). Mixed Mode Cracking in Layered MaterialsMixed Mode Cracking in Layered Materials. Advances in applied mechanics, pp. 63-191, DOI: 10.1016/s0065-2156(08)70164-9,
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Type
Chapter in a book
Year
1991
Authors
2
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
DOI
10.1016/s0065-2156(08)70164-9
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