Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole

A disclination dipole can significantly influence the plasticity and fracture of crystalline materials. This paper investigates the nucleation of a Zener-Griffith crack from a disclination dipole under remote loading. The energy formulation leads to a nonlinear algebraic equation, from which the cra...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wu, Mao See
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141490
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-141490
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1414902020-06-09T01:17:25Z Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole Wu, Mao See School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Engineering::Aeronautical engineering Disclination Dipole Zener-Griffith Crack A disclination dipole can significantly influence the plasticity and fracture of crystalline materials. This paper investigates the nucleation of a Zener-Griffith crack from a disclination dipole under remote loading. The energy formulation leads to a nonlinear algebraic equation, from which the crack length and crack head opening can be determined. The potentiality of the dipole to nucleate a crack is judged by comparing the energy of the uncracked and cracked solid. The results show that both stable submicron-size and unstable micron-size cracks are possible. Not all solutions are energetically favorable. Generally speaking, the unstable crack lengths decrease with the applied stress and the dipole power, while the stable crack lengths increase with these parameters. An opposite trend is predicted for their dependence on the surface energy. In contrast, both stable and unstable crack lengths decrease with the dipole arm length. The crack head opening is generally two to three orders of magnitude smaller than the crack length. The critical dipole power to nucleate a crack increases with a larger surface energy or a smaller elastic stiffness. It has a size effect, in which the logarithm of the critical power decreases linearly with the logarithm of the structural size. 2020-06-09T01:17:25Z 2020-06-09T01:17:25Z 2017 Journal Article Wu, M. S. (2018). Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole. International Journal of Plasticity, 100, 142-155. doi:10.1016/j.ijplas.2017.10.001 0749-6419 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141490 10.1016/j.ijplas.2017.10.001 2-s2.0-85030859909 100 142 155 en International Journal of Plasticity © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Aeronautical engineering
Disclination Dipole
Zener-Griffith Crack
spellingShingle Engineering::Aeronautical engineering
Disclination Dipole
Zener-Griffith Crack
Wu, Mao See
Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole
description A disclination dipole can significantly influence the plasticity and fracture of crystalline materials. This paper investigates the nucleation of a Zener-Griffith crack from a disclination dipole under remote loading. The energy formulation leads to a nonlinear algebraic equation, from which the crack length and crack head opening can be determined. The potentiality of the dipole to nucleate a crack is judged by comparing the energy of the uncracked and cracked solid. The results show that both stable submicron-size and unstable micron-size cracks are possible. Not all solutions are energetically favorable. Generally speaking, the unstable crack lengths decrease with the applied stress and the dipole power, while the stable crack lengths increase with these parameters. An opposite trend is predicted for their dependence on the surface energy. In contrast, both stable and unstable crack lengths decrease with the dipole arm length. The crack head opening is generally two to three orders of magnitude smaller than the crack length. The critical dipole power to nucleate a crack increases with a larger surface energy or a smaller elastic stiffness. It has a size effect, in which the logarithm of the critical power decreases linearly with the logarithm of the structural size.
author2 School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
author_facet School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Wu, Mao See
format Article
author Wu, Mao See
author_sort Wu, Mao See
title Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole
title_short Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole
title_full Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole
title_fullStr Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole
title_full_unstemmed Energy analysis of Zener-Griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole
title_sort energy analysis of zener-griffith crack nucleation from a disclination dipole
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141490
_version_ 1681056979243499520