Abstract :
Thermoelastic effects in fracture are generally considered to be negligible at the benefit
of the conversion of plastic work into heat. For the case of dynamic crack initiation, the experimental
and theoretical emphasis has been put on the temperature rise associated with crack-tip plasticity.
Nevertheless, earlier experimental work with polymers has shown that thermoelastic cooling
precedes the temperature rise at the tip of a propagating crack (Fuller et al., 1975). Transient
thermoelastic effects at the tip of a dynamically loaded crack have been theoretically assessed and
shown to be significant when thermal conductivity is initially neglected (Rittel, 1997). However, the
fundamental question of the relation between crack initiation and thermal fields, both of transient
nature, is still open.
In this paper, we present an experimental investigation of the thermoelastic effect at the tip of
fatigue cracks subjected to mixed-mode (dominant mode 1) dynamic loading. The material is
commercial polymethylmethacrylate as an example of "brittle" material.
The applied loads, crack-tip temperatures and fracture time are simultaneously monitored to
provide a more complete image of dynamic crack initiation. The corresponding evolution of the
stress intensity factors is calculated by a hybrid-experimental numerical model.
The results show that substantial crack-tip cooling develops initially to an extent which corroborates
theoretical estimates. This effect is followed by a temperature rise.
Fracture is shown to initiate during the early cooling phase, thus emphasizing the relevance of
the phenomenon to dynamic crack initiation in this material as probably in other materials. ~ 1998
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