Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
771578 Engineering Fracture Mechanics 2006 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Adhesive connections are potentially weak locations in many kinds of engineering structures. Since adhesive joints can be regarded locally as bimaterial notches, the assessment of the hazard of crack nucleation, initiation and propagation in the vicinity of bimaterial notches and the reliability of the junctions is an important problem. An essential requirement in this context is a sufficient criterion for crack nucleation. The present contribution proposes a modified approach based on Leguillon’s hypothesis in order to provide a feasible criterion. A crack at a notch is assumed to be initiated and to grow if and only if both the released energy and the local stresses exceed critical values. Thus, simulating virtual crack growth along an interface of two dissimilar bonded materials, the integrity of the bond is revisable. The approach enables the determination of characteristic lengths for freshly nucleated cracks forming the base for any further integrity assessment. As an example, the concept is applied to the analysis of an adhesive bond of metallic and ceramic materials under severe thermal loading conditions as they occur, among other examples, in high temperature fuel cell technology. It is shown that the failure hazard of the adhesive joint can be reduced significantly by an appropriate local design.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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