- Fracture toughness
In
materials science , fracture toughness is a property which describes the ability of a material containing a crack to resistfracture , and is one of the most important properties of any material for virtually all design applications. It is denoted KIc and has the units of .The subscript 'Ic' denotes mode I crack opening under a normal tensile stress perpendicular to the crack, since the material can be made thick enough to resist shear (mode II) or tear (mode III).
Fracture toughness is a quantitative way of expressing a material's resistance to
brittle fracture when a crack is present. If a material has a large value of fracture toughness it will probably undergoductile fracture. Brittle fracture is very characteristic of materials with a low fracture toughness value.Fracture mechanics , which leads to the concept of fracture toughness, was largely based on the work of
A. A. Griffith who, amongst other things, studied the behaviour of cracks in brittle materials.Table of values
Here are some typical values of fracture toughness for various materials:
Crack growth as a stability problem
Consider a body with flaws (cracks) that is subject to some loading; the stability of the crack can be assessed as follows. We can assume for simplicity that the loading is of constant displacement or displacement controlled type (like loading with a screw jack); we can also simplify the discussion by characterizing the crack by its area A. If we consider an adjacent state of the body as being one with a larger crack (area A+dA), we can then assess the strain energy in the two states and evaluate the
strain energy release rate .The rate is reckoned with respect to the change in crack area, so if we use U for
strain energy , thestrain energy release rate is numerically dU/dA. It may be noted that for a body loaded in constant displacement mode, the displacement is applied and the force level is dictated by thestiffness (orcompliance ) of the body. If thecrack grows in size, thestiffness decreases, so the force level will decrease. This decrease in force level under the same displacement (strain) level indicates that the elasticstrain energy stored in the body is decreasing - is being released. Hence the termstrain energy release rate which is usually denoted with symbol "G".The
strain energy release rate is higher for higher loads and larger cracks. If thestrain energy so released exceeds a critical value "G"c, then the crack will grow spontaneously. Forbrittle materials, "G"c can be equated to thesurface energy of the (two) new crack surfaces; in other words, inbrittle materials, a crack will grow spontaneously if thestrain energy released is equal to or greater than theenergy required to grow the crack surface(s). The stability condition can be written as:"elastic energy released = surface energy created"
If the
elastic energy releases is less than the critical value, then the crack will not grow; equality signifies neutralstability and if thestrain energy release rate exceeds the critical value, the crack will start growing in an unstable manner. Forductile materials, energy associated withplastic deformation has to be taken into account. When there isplastic deformation at the crack tip (as occurs most often in metals) the energy to propagate the crack may increase by several orders of magnitude as the work related toplastic deformation may be much larger than thesurface energy . In such cases, thestability criterion has to restated as:"elastic energy released = surface energy + plastic deformation energy"
Practically, this means a higher value for the critical value "G"c. From the definition of "G", we can deduce that it has dimensions of work (or energy)/area or force/length. For
ductile metals "G"Ic is around 50 to 200 kJ/m2, forbrittle metals it is usually 1-5 and forglass es and brittlepolymer s it is almost always less than 0.5. The I subscript here refers to mode I or crack opening mode as described in the section on fracture mechanics.The problem can also be formulated in terms of
stress instead of energy, leading to the termsstress intensity factor "K" (or "K"I for mode I) and criticalstress intensity factor "K"c (and "K"Ic). These "K"c and "K"Ic (etc) quantities are commonly referred to as fracture toughness, though it is equivalent to use "G"c. Typical values for "K"Icare 150 MN/m3/2 for ductile (very tough) metals, 25 for brittle ones and 1-10 for glasses and brittle polymers. Notice the different units used by "G"Ic and "K"Ic. Engineers tend to use the latter as an indication oftoughness .Conjoint action
There are number of instances where this picture of a critical crack is modified by
corrosion . Thus,fretting corrosion occurs when a corrosive medium is present at the interface between two rubbing surfaces. Fretting (in the absence of corrosion) results from the disruption of very small areas that bond and break as the surfaces undergofriction , often under vibrating conditions. The bonding contact areas deform under the localised pressure and the two surfaces gradually wear away. Fracture mechanics dictates that each minute localised fracture has to satisfy the general rule that the elastic energy released as the bond fractures has to exceed the work done in plastically deforming it and in creating the (very tiny) fracture surfaces. This process is enhanced when corrosion is present, not least because the corrosion products act as anabrasive between the rubbing surfaces.Fatigue is another instance where cyclical stressing, this time of a bulk lump of metal, causes small flaws to develop. Ultimately one such flaw exceeds the critical condition and fracture propagates across the whole structure. The 'fatigue life' of a component is the time it takes for criticality to be reached, for a given regime of cyclical stress. Corrosion fatigue is what happens when a cyclically stressed structure is subjected to a corrosive environment at the same time. This not only serves to initiate surface cracks but (see below) actually modifies the crack growth process. As a result the fatigue life is shortened, often considerably.
tress-corrosion cracking (SCC)
This phenomenon is the unexpected sudden failure of normally
ductile metals subjected to a constanttensile stress in a corrosive environment. Certain austeniticstainless steel s andaluminium alloy s crack in the presence ofchloride s, mildsteel cracks in the present of alkali (boiler cracking) andcopper alloys crack inammonia cal solutions (season cracking). Worse still, high-tensile structural steels crack in an unexpectedly brittle manner in a whole variety of aqueous environments, especially chloride. With the possible exception of the latter, which is a special example of "hydrogen cracking ", all the others display the phenomenon of subcritical crack growth, i.e. small surface flaws propagate (usually smoothly) under conditions where fracture mechanics predicts that failure should not occur. That is, in the presence of a corrodent, cracks develop and propagate well below "K"Ic. In fact, the subcritical value of the stress intensity, designated as "K"Iscc, may be less than 1% of "K"Ic, as the following table shows:The subcritical nature of propagation may be attributed to the chemical energy released as the crack propagates. That is,
:"elastic energy released + chemical energy = surface energy + deformation energy"
The crack initiates at "K"Iscc and thereafter propagates at a rate governed by the slowest process, which most of the time is the rate at which corrosive ions can diffuse to the crack tip. As the crack advances so "K" rises (because crack length appears in the calculation of stress intensity). Finally it reaches "K"Ic , whereupon fast fracture ensues and the component fails. One of the practical difficulties with SCC is its unexpected nature.
Stainless steel s, for example, are employed because under most conditions they are 'passive', i.e. effectively inert. Very often one finds a single crack has propagated while the rest of the metal surface stays apparently unaffected.ee also
*
Fracture
*Fracture mechanics
*Brittle-ductile transition zone
*Charpy impact test
*Izod impact strength test
* Toughness of ceramics by indention
*Stress corrosion cracking
*Toughness References
# Anderson TL, "Fracture Mechanics: Fundamentals and Applications" (CRC Press, Boston 1995).
# Lawn B, "Fracture of Brittle Solids" (Cambridge University Press 1993, 2nd edition).
# Knott, "Fundamentals of Fracture Mechanics" (1973).
# Foroulis (ed.), "Environmentally-Sensitive Fracture of Engineering Materials" (1979).
# Suresh S, "Fatigue of Materials" (Cambridge University Press 1998, 2nd edition).
# West JM, "Basic Corrosion & Oxidation" (Horwood 1986, 2nd edn), chap.12.
# http://www.sv.vt.edu/classes/MSE2094_NoteBook/97ClassProj/exper/gordon/www/fractough.html
# http://www.springerlink.com/content/v2m7u4qm53172069/fulltext.pdf sriram
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.