Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
775705 Engineering Fracture Mechanics 2009 22 Pages PDF
Abstract

Embedding cohesive surfaces into finite element models is a widely used technique for the numerical simulation of material separation (i.e. crack propagation). Typically, a traction–separation law is specified that relates the magnitude of the cohesive traction to the distance between the separating surfaces. Thus the characterization of fracture in such models is not directly coupled to the bulk constitutive response, in the sense that the cohesive traction does not explicitly depend on material stretching in the plane of the fracture surface. In this work, an initially-rigid cohesive-traction formulation that is coupled to the surrounding continuum is introduced as a further development of the cohesive zone idea. In this model, the traction–separation law – and therefore the fracture phenomenology – derives directly from the bulk constitutive law. The immediate goal is an improved cohesive zone framework that naturally and logically initiates cohesive separation behavior, and couples its evolution to the material state in the region of the crack tip. A cohesive element based on this model is implemented in an explicit three-dimensional finite element code. Proof-of-concept analyses using both linear elastic and Gurson void growth constitutive relations are presented. A three-point bend simulation is found to give good agreement with experimental results.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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