Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
804397 Probabilistic Engineering Mechanics 2009 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

This article reports the results of a parametric study on the fracture behavior of a crack in functionally graded materials. The study involves stochastic descriptions of particle and void numbers; location, size, and orientation characteristics; and constituent elastic properties; a concurrent multiscale model for calculating crack-driving forces; and Monte Carlo simulation for fracture reliability analysis. A level-cut, inhomogeneous, filtered Poisson field describes the statistically inhomogeneous microstructures of graded composites. Numerical results for an edge-cracked, graded specimen show that the particle shape and orientation for the same phase volume fractions have negligible effects on fracture reliability, even for graded materials with a high modular ratio. However, voids and the particle gradation parameter, if they exist or increase, can significantly raise the probability of fracture initiation. Limited crack-propagation simulations in graded composites containing brittle particles reveal that the fracture toughness of the matrix material can significantly influence the likelihood or the extent of crack growth.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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