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Stress-Intensity Factors for Small Surface and Corner Cracks in Plates
Author(s) -
IS Raju,
S. N. Atluri,
JC Newman
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
nasa technical reports server (nasa)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
DOI - 10.1520/stp18829s
Subject(s) - finite element method , stress intensity factor , crack tip opening displacement , structural engineering , extended finite element method , materials science , bending , stress (linguistics) , stress concentration , tension (geology) , intensity (physics) , geometry , composite material , engineering , mathematics , physics , ultimate tensile strength , optics , linguistics , philosophy
Three-dimensional finite-element and finite-alternating methods were used to obtain the stress-intensity factors for small surface and corner cracked plates subjected to remote tension and bending loads. The crack-depth-to-crack-length ratios (a/c) ranged from 0.2 to 1 and the crack-depth-to-plate-thickness ratios (a/t) ranged from 0.05 to 0.2. The performance of the finite-element alternating method was studied on these crack configurations. A study of the computational effort involved in the finite-element alternating method showed that several crack configurations could be analyzed with a single rectangular mesh idealization, whereas the conventional finite-element method requires a different mesh for each configuration. The stress-intensity factors obtained with the finite-element-alternating method agreed well (within 5 percent) with those calculated from the finite-element method with singularity elements.

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