Title of article
Fracture saturation and critical thickness in layered materials
Author/Authors
Yin، نويسنده , , H.M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
9
From page
1007
To page
1015
Abstract
Opening-mode fractures in layered materials are commonly found in a layer with uniform spacing that is nearly proportional to the thickness of the fractured layer. However, when fracture spacing reduces to a certain value, fracture density is saturated and no new fracture forms. If a loading condition is fixed, there exists a critical thickness of the layer, below which no fracture forms. This paper presents a three-layer model, containing a weak layer between two stronger layers, to interpret the fracture saturation and critical thickness of layered materials. Using elastic governing equations and a weak form stress boundary condition, a closed-form solution of elastic fields in the weak layer is derived and the energy release rate for opening-mode fracture is obtained. Interestingly, the normal stress between such fractures undergoes a transition from tensile to compressive with increasing applied tensile loading, which causes fracture saturation. Explicit expressions of critical fracture-spacing-to-layer-thickness ratio and critical thickness are derived for fracture saturation and fracture free conditions, respectively. Comparison with the existing numerical simulation results demonstrates the capability of this model. This explicit, analytical solution is useful to structural design and geosciences.
Keywords
energy release rate , Opening-mode fracture , Fracture saturation , layered materials , Thin film , Periodic cracks
Journal title
International Journal of Solids and Structures
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
International Journal of Solids and Structures
Record number
1387671
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