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Fundamental solutions and dual boundary element methods for fracture in plane Cosserat elasticity
Author(s) -
Elena Atroshchenko,
Stéphane Bordas
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society a mathematical physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2946
pISSN - 1364-5021
DOI - 10.1098/rspa.2015.0216
Subject(s) - boundary element method , stress intensity factor , mathematics , elasticity (physics) , mathematical analysis , boundary (topology) , boundary value problem , singular boundary method , plane stress , singular integral , geometry , fracture mechanics , finite element method , integral equation , structural engineering , materials science , engineering , composite material
Artículo de publicación ISIIn this paper, both singular and hypersingular fundamental solutions of plane Cosserat elasticity are derived and given in a ready-to-use form. The hypersingular fundamental solutions allow to formulate the analogue of Somigliana stress identity, which can be used to obtain the stress and couple-stress fields inside the domain from the boundary values of the displacements, microrotation and stress and couple-stress tractions. Using these newly derived fundamental solutions, the boundary integral equations of both types are formulated and solved by the boundary element method. Simultaneous use of both types of equations (approach known as the dual boundary element method (BEM)) allows problems where parts of the boundary are overlapping, such as crack problems, to be treated and to do this for general geometry and loading conditions. The high accuracy of the boundary element method for both types of equations is demonstrated for a number of benchmark problems, including a Griffith crack problem and a plate with an edge crack. The detailed comparison of the BEM results and the analytical solution for a Griffith crack and an edge crack is given, particularly in terms of stress and couple-stress intensity factors, as well as the crack opening displacements and microrotations on the crack faces and the angular distributions of stresses and couple-stresses around the crack tip.Fondecyt Chile 11130259 European Research Council 27957

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