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The Equivalent Strain Energy Density approach re‐formulated and applied to sharp V‐shaped notches under localized and generalized plasticity
Author(s) -
LAZZARIN P.,
ZAMBARDI R.
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
fatigue and fracture of engineering materials and structures
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.887
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1460-2695
pISSN - 8756-758X
DOI - 10.1046/j.1460-2695.2002.00543.x
Subject(s) - strain energy density function , plasticity , plane stress , stress intensity factor , materials science , strain hardening exponent , stress (linguistics) , mechanics , constitutive equation , hardening (computing) , plane (geometry) , strain energy , energy density , strain (injury) , geometry , finite element method , physics , composite material , fracture mechanics , mathematics , thermodynamics , medicine , linguistics , philosophy , layer (electronics) , theoretical physics
In the case of a rounded notch, the stress and strain at the notch tip can be determined by the traditional Neuber rule or by the Equivalent Strain Energy Density (ESED) approach, as formulated by Glinka and Molski. In the latter case the elastoplastic strain energy density at the notch tip is thought of as coincident with that determined under purely elastic conditions. For sharply V‐shaped notches this approach is not directly applicable, since the strain energy density at the notch tip tends toward infinity both for a material obeying an elastic law and a material obeying a power hardening law. By using the notch stress intensity factors, the present paper suggests a re‐formulation of the ESED approach which is applied no longer at the notch tip but to a finite size circular sector surrounding the notch tip. In particular we have adopted the hypothesis that, under plane strain conditions, the value of the energy concentration due to the notch is constant and independent of the two constitutive laws. When small scale yielding conditions are present, such a hypothesis immediately results in the constancy of the strain energy averaged over the process volume. As a consequence, plastic notch stress intensity factors valid for sharp V‐shaped notches can be predicted on the basis of the linear elastic stress distributions alone.

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