Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
808191 Theoretical and Applied Fracture Mechanics 2009 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Brittle materials randomly reinforced with a low volume fraction of strong, stiff and ductile fibers are considered, with specific reference to fiber-reinforced cements and concrete. Visible cracks in such materials are accompanied by a surrounding damage zone – together these constitute a very complex “crack system”. Enormous effort has been put into trying to understand the micromechanics of such systems. Almost all of these efforts do not deal with the “crack system” propagation behavior as a whole. The propagation process of such a “crack system” includes propagation of the visible crack and the growth of the damage zone. Propagation may take place by lengthening of the visible crack together with the concomitant lengthening of the surrounding damage zone, or simply by broadening of the damage zone while the visible crack length remains unchanged – or simultaneously by growth of both types. A phenomenological completely theoretical model (for an ideal material) is here proposed which can serve to examine the propagation process by means of energy principles, without recourse to the microscopic details of the process. An application of this theoretical approach is presented for the case of a damage zone evolving with a rectangular shape. This shape is chosen because it is expected that it will illustrate the nature of damage evolution and because the computational procedure necessary to follow the growth is the most straightforward.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
Authors
, ,