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crack growth

Mathematics of Crack growth

Submitted by paragiitb on
  1.  How to find G (energy release rate) using wnuk's equation? by considering the fracture process zone explaining the assumptions and concept involved??
  2. can anyone explain about : Eshelby's basic assumption for finding the change of displacement after the crack tip has moved a distance x?
  3. How is the general form(equation) for singular parts of the stresses in the plane of the crack  derived (explain the breif fundamentals) ?



    all these question are in reference to the book Micromechanics of defects in solids by toshio mura 

Fatigue crack growth

Submitted by Mary Pops on
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Hi all,

 

I wanted to simulate fatigue crack growth in ls-dyna, obtain dK, crack tip stress fields. But I wanted to start from a simple model. I can't find any examples online, tutorial...

[SOLVED] 3D crack growth modelling in Abaqus by XFEM

Submitted by Yazri Yaakob on

Good day everyone,

I'm new to iMechanica and look forward to getting to know everyone here.

I'm currently doing analysis of interlaminar crack growth in fibre-reinforced composite by Extended Finite Element Method (XFEM) using Abaqus. I'm a new Abaqus user and therefore I have to familiarise myself by constructing random 2D and 3D models with isotropic materials before jumping onto anisotropic.

R C Beams

Submitted by Reza Mousavi on

I am a novice user of abaqus and trying to model crack growth in rc beams with longitudinal reinforcement and stirrups under dynamic loads by try and error method

rebar layers are in shell element and i am using CDP for my concrete. i am trying to find out if i need to have many solid parts or one is enough and if mesh adaptivity is necessary or not because of crack growth . I appreciate any consulting in this field and i will share my knowledge with anybody that helps me

my first error message is

Seeking candidates for positions in Houston, also positions in Germany

Submitted by Edward W. Walbridge on

Our agency, Reliability Analysis Associates, Inc., specializes in recruiting Reliability Engineers and related skills.   For a client in the oil business in Houston, TX we are seeking candidates for two positions that require knowlege of finite element analysis, crack growth, reliability, and low cycle fatigue.   The two job descriptions are attached.

 

Epi-convergence (max-ent bases), crack growth

Submitted by N. Sukumar on

In the attached paper, we have used Variational Analysis techniques (in particular, the theory of epi-convergence) to prove the continuity of maximum-entropy basis functions. In general, for non-smooth functionals, moving objectives and/or constraints, the tools of Newton-Leibniz calculus (gradient, point-convergence) prove to be insufficient; notions of set-valued mappings, set-convergence, etc., are required. Epi-convergence bears close affinity to Gamma- or Mosco-convergence (widely used in the mathematical treatment of martensitic phase transformations). The introductory material on convex analysis and epi-convergence had to be omitted in the revised version; hence the material is by no means self-contained. Here are a few more pointers that would prove to be helpful. Our main point of reference is Variational Analysis by RTR and RJBW; the Princeton Classic Convex Analysis by RTR provides the important tools in convex analysis. For convex optimization, the text Convex Optimization by SB and LV (available online) is excellent. The lecture slides provide a very nice (and gentle) introduction to some of the important concepts in convex analysis. The epigraphical landscape is very rich, and many of the applications would resonate with mechanicians.

On a different topic (non-planar crack growth), we have coupled the x-fem to a new fast marching algorithm. Here are couple of animations on growth of an inclined penny crack in tension (unstructured tetrahedral mesh with just over 12K nodes): larger `time' increment and smaller `time' increment. This is joint-work with Chopp, Bechet and Moes (NSF-OISE project). I will update this page as and when more relevant links are available.