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  2. Crack growth equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crack_growth_equation

    The critical crack length, =, can be computed when = as = (). By solving the above equation, the critical crack length is obtained as =. ...

  3. Fracture mechanics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fracture_mechanics

    Compute the change in the free energy (surface energy − elastic energy) as a function of the crack length. Failure occurs when the free energy attains a peak value at a critical crack length, beyond which the free energy decreases as the crack length increases, i.e. by causing fracture. Using this procedure, Griffith found that

  4. Fracture toughness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fracture_toughness

    The specimen showing stable crack growth shows an increasing trend in fracture toughness as the crack length increases (ductile crack extension). This plot of fracture toughness vs crack length is called the resistance (R)-curve. ASTM E561 outlines a procedure for determining toughness vs crack growth curves in materials. [17]

  5. Energy release rate (fracture mechanics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_release_rate...

    Consider a rectangular path shown in the second figure: start on the top crack face, (1) go up to the top at , (2) go to the right past the crack tip, (3) go down to the bottom at , (4) go along the bottom to the left, and (5) go back up to the bottom crack face. The J-integral is zero along many parts of this path.

  6. Stress intensity factor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress_intensity_factor

    If a very sharp crack, or a V-notch can be made in a material, the minimum value of can be empirically determined, which is the critical value of stress intensity required to propagate the crack. This critical value determined for mode I loading in plane strain is referred to as the critical fracture toughness of the material.

  7. Paris' law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris'_law

    In a 1961 paper, P. C. Paris introduced the idea that the rate of crack growth may depend on the stress intensity factor. [4] Then in their 1963 paper, Paris and Erdogan indirectly suggested the equation with the aside remark "The authors are hesitant but cannot resist the temptation to draw the straight line slope 1/4 through the data" after reviewing data on a log-log plot of crack growth ...

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  9. Crack growth resistance curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crack_growth_resistance_curve

    Size and geometry also plays a role in determining the shape of the R curve. A crack in a thin sheet tends to produce a steeper R curve than a crack in a thick plate because there is a low degree of stress triaxiality at the crack tip in the thin sheet while the material near the tip of the crack in the thick plate may be in plane strain.