Abstract :
A trend in the last decade towards models in which nonlinear crack tip processes are represented
explicitly, rather than being assigned to a point process at the crack tip (as in linear elastic
fracture mechanics), is reviewed by a survey of the literature. A good compromise between computational
efficiency and physical reality seems to be the cohesive zone formulation, which collapses the
effect of the nonlinear crack process zone onto a surface of displacement discontinuity (generalized
crack). Damage mechanisms that can be represented by cohesive models include delamination of plies,
large splitting (shear) cracks within plies, multiple matrix cracking within plies, fiber rupture or microbuckling
(kink band formation), friction acting between delaminated plies, process zones at crack tips
representing crazing or other nonlinearity, and large scale bridging by through-thickness reinforcement
or oblique crack-bridging fibers. The power of the technique is illustrated here for delamination and
splitting cracks in laminates. A cohesive element is presented for simulating three-dimensional, modedependent
process zones. An essential feature of the formulation is that the delamination crack shape
can follow its natural evolution, according to the evolving mode conditions calculated within the simulation.
But in numerical work, care must be taken that element sizes are defined consistently with
the characteristic lengths of cohesive zones that are implied by the chosen cohesive laws. Qualitatively
successful applications are reported to some practical problems in composite engineering, which cannot
be adequately analyzed by conventional tools such as linear elastic fracture mechanics and the
virtual crack closure technique. The simulations successfully reproduce experimentally measured crack
shapes that have been reported in the literature over a decade ago, but have not been reproduced by
prior models.
Keywords :
fracture. , Bridged crack , cohesive model , Delamination , Composite