Title of article :
Cohesive element modeling of viscoelastic fracture: application to peel testing of polymers
Author/Authors :
P. Rahulkumar، نويسنده , , A. Jagota، نويسنده , , S. J. Bennison، نويسنده , , S. Saigal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
A computational modeling technique for fracture propagation in viscoelastic materials using cohesive elements for
the zone ahead of the crack tip is presented. The computational technique is used to study the problem of increase in
fracture energy with peel velocity in peel testing of polymers. A rate-independent phenomenological cohesive zone
model is used to model the intrinsic fracture toughness of the interface between the polymer sheets. A dimensional
analysis reveals that the macroscopic fracture energy scales with the intrinsic fracture toughness and is a function of
peel velocity, and parameters such as the thickness, bulk properties of the polymer sheets, and other cohesive zone
properties. The growth of fracture energy as a function of the peel velocity has been studied for polymer sheets
characterized by a standard linear viscoelastic solid. Viscoelastic losses in the peel arm vanish in the limits of very slow
and rapid peeling. Peak dissipation is obtained at an intermediate velocity, which is related to the characteristic
relaxation time and thickness. This behavior is interpreted in terms of the size of elastic and viscous zones near the
crack tip. It is found that the total energy dissipated is dependent upon both the intrinsic fracture toughness and the
characteristic opening displacement of the cohesive zone model. The computational framework has been used to model
experimental data on peeling of Butadiene rubbers. It is found that the usual interpretation of these data, that the
macroscopic dissipation equals the rate-independent intrinsic toughness multiplied by a factor that depends on rate of
loading, leads to a large quantitative discrepancy between theory and experiment. It is proposed that a model based on
a rate-dependent cohesive law be used to model these peel tests
Keywords :
Polymers , fractureenergy , fracture , Cohesive zone models , cohesive elements , Finite elements , Peel tests , Viscoelasticity , Rubber
Journal title :
International Journal of Solids and Structures
Journal title :
International Journal of Solids and Structures