Title: Cracking
1Cracking
of composites
Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian 15 a 17 de Julho de
2010
- Miguel Patrício
- CMUC
- Polytechnic Institute of Leiria
- School of Technology and Management
2Composite materials
- Composites consist of two or more (chemically or
physically) different constituents that are
bonded together along interior material
interfaces and do not dissolve or blend into each
other.
3Composite materials
- Idea by putting together the right ingredients,
in the right way, a material with a better
performance can be obtained
- Examples of applications
- Airplanes
- Spacecrafts
- Solar panels
- Racing car bodies
- Bicycle frames
- Fishing rods
- Storage tanks
4Cracking
- Why is cracking of composites worthy of
attention?
- Even microscopic flaws may cause seemingly safe
structures to fail
- Replacing components of engineering structures is
often too expensive and may be unnecessary
- It is important to predict whether and in which
manner failure might occur
5Lengthscales
- Fracture of composites can be regarded at
different lengthscales
Microscopic (atomistic)
Mesoscopic
Macroscopic
10-10
10-6
10-3
10-1
102
LENGTHSCALES
6Lengthscales
- Fracture of composites can be regarded at
different lengthscales
Microscopic (atomistic)
Mesoscopic
Macroscopic
10-10
10-6
10-3
10-1
102
Continuum Mechanics
LENGTHSCALES
7Problem formulation
- plate with pre-existent crack
- Meso-structure linear elastic components
- Goal determine
- crack path
- Mesoscopic
- (matrixinclusions)
8Macroscopic modelling
- It is possible to replace the mesoscopic
structure with a corresponding homogenised
structure (averaging process)
homogenisation
9Macroscopic modelling
- Will a crack propagate on a homogeneous (and
isotropic) medium?
- Alan Griffith gave an answer for an infinite
plate with a centre through elliptic flaw
the crack will propagate if the strain energy
release rate G during crack growth is large
enough to exceed the rate of increase in surface
energy R associated with the formation of new
crack surfaces, i.e.,
where
is the strain energy released in the formation of
a crack of length a
is the corresponding surface energy increase
10Macroscopic modelling
- How will a crack propagate on a homogeneous (and
isotropic) medium?
- In the vicinity of a crack tip, the tangential
stress is given by
y
x
11Macroscopic modelling
- How will a crack propagate on a homogeneous (and
isotropic) medium?
- In the vicinity of a crack tip, the tangential
stress is given by
y
x
12Macroscopic modelling
- How will a crack propagate on a homogeneous (and
isotropic) medium?
- Maximum circumferential tensile stress (local)
criterion
y
Crack growth will occur if the circumferential
stress intensity factor equals or exceeds a
critical value, ie.,
x
Crack growth occurs in the direction that
maximises the circumferential stress intensity
factor
13Incremental approach (macroscopic)
- An incremental approach may be set up
- The starting point is a homogeneous plate with a
pre-existent crack
14Incremental approach (macroscopic)
- An incremental approach may be set up
- The starting point is a homogeneous plate with a
pre-existent crack
...thus determining
15Incremental approach (macroscopic)
- An incremental approach may be set up
- The starting point is a homogeneous plate with a
pre-existent crack
- check propagation criterion
If criterion is met
- compute the direction of propagation
- increment crack (update geometry)
16Macroscopic modelling
- Incremental approach to predict whether and how
crack propagation may occur
- The mesoscale effects are not fully taken into
consideration
17Mesoscale modelling example
- In Basso et all (2010) the fracture toughness of
dual-phase austempered ductile iron was analysed
at the mesoscale, using finite element modelling.
- A typical model geometry consisted of a 2D plate,
containing graphite nodules and LTF zones
Basso, A. Martínez, R. Cisilino, A. P. Sikora,
J. Experimental and numerical assessment of
fracture toughness of dual-phase austempered
ductile iron, Fatigue Fracture of Engineering
Materials Structures, 33, pp. 1-11, 2010
18Mesoscale modelling example
Basso, A. Martínez, R. Cisilino, A. P. Sikora,
J. Experimental and numerical assessment of
fracture toughness of dual-phase austempered
ductile iron, Fatigue Fracture of Engineering
Materials Structures, 33, pp. 1-11, 2010
19Mesoscale modelling example
Basso, A. Martínez, R. Cisilino, A. P. Sikora,
J. Experimental and numerical assessment of
fracture toughness of dual-phase austempered
ductile iron, Fatigue Fracture of Engineering
Materials Structures, 33, pp. 1-11, 2010
20Mesoscale modelling example
number of graphite nodules in model 113 number
of LTF zones in model 31
Models were solved using Abaqus/Explicit
(numerical package) running on a Beowulf Cluster
with 8 Pentium 4 PCs
Basso, A. Martínez, R. Cisilino, A. P. Sikora,
J. Experimental and numerical assessment of
fracture toughness of dual-phase austempered
ductile iron, Fatigue Fracture of Engineering
Materials Structures, 33, pp. 1-11, 2010
21Computational limitations
- In Zhu et all (2002) a numerical simulation on
the shear fracture process of concrete was
performed
The mesoscopic elements in the specimen must be
relatively small enough to reflect the mesoscopic
mechanical properties of materials under the
conditions that the current computer is able to
perform this analysis because the number of
mesoscopic elements is substantially limited by
the computer capacity
Zhu W.C. Tang C.A. Numerical simulation on
shear fracture process of concrete using
mesoscopic mechanical model, Construction and
Building Materials, 16(8), pp. 453-463(11), 2002
22Computational limitations
- In Zhu et all (2002) a numerical simulation on
the shear fracture process of concrete was
performed
The mesoscopic elements in the specimen must be
relatively small enough to reflect the mesoscopic
mechanical properties of materials under the
conditions that the current computer is able to
perform this analysis because the number of
mesoscopic elements is substantially limited by
the computer capacity
Zhu W.C. Tang C.A. Numerical simulation on
shear fracture process of concrete using
mesoscopic mechanical model, Construction and
Building Materials, 16(8), pp. 453-463(11), 2002
23Mesoscopic problem
- How will a crack propagate on a material with a
mesoscopic structure?
24Mesoscopic problem
- Cauchys equation of motion
- On a homogeneous material, the crack will
propagate if
- If it does propagate, it will do so in the
direction that maximises the circumferential
stress intensity factor
boundary conditions
many inclusions implies high computational costs
the crack Interacts with the inclusions
25Solving the elasticity problem
Schwarz (overlapping domain
decomposition scheme)
Critical region where fracture occurs
Patrício, M. Mattheij, R. M. M. de With, G.
Solutions for periodically distributed materials
with localized imperfections CMES Computer
Modeling in Engineering and Sciences, 38(2), pp.
89-118, 2008
26Solving the elasticity problem
Critical region where fracture occurs
Patrício, M. Mattheij, R. M. M. de With, G.
Solutions for periodically distributed materials
with localized imperfections CMES Computer
Modeling in Engineering and Sciences, 38(2), pp.
89-118, 2008
27Solving the elasticity problem
Critical region where fracture occurs
Patrício, M. Mattheij, R. M. M. de With, G.
Solutions for periodically distributed materials
with localized imperfections CMES Computer
Modeling in Engineering and Sciences, 38(2), pp.
89-118, 2008
28Solving the elasticity problem
- Hybrid approach algorithm
Patrício, M. Mattheij, R. M. M. de With, G.
Solutions for periodically distributed materials
with localized imperfections CMES Computer
Modeling in Engineering and Sciences, 38(2), pp.
89-118, 2008
29Homogenisation
- How does homogenisation work?
Reference cell The material behaviour is
characterised by a tensor defined over the
reference cell
Assumptions
30Homogenisation
Then the solution of the heterogeneous
problem
31Homogenisation
Then the solution of the heterogeneous
problem converges to the solution of a
homogeneous problem weakly in
32Homogenisation (example)
- Four different composites plates
- (matrixcircular inclusions)
- Linear elastic, homogeneous, isotropic
constituents
- Computational domain is 0, 1 x 0,1
- Material parameters
- matrix
- inclusions
- The plate is pulled along its upper and lower
boundaries with constant unit stress
33Homogenisation (example)
b) 100 inclusions, periodic
a) 25 inclusions, periodic
c) 25 inclusions, random
d) 100 inclusions, random
34Homogenisation (example)
- Homogenisation may be employed to approximate the
solution of the elasticity problems
Periodical distribution of inclusions
Error increases
Error decreases with number of inclusions
Random distribution of inclusions
Highly heterogeneous composite with randomly
distributed circular inclusions, submetido
35Hybrid approach (example)
Smaller error
M. Patrício Highly heterogeneous composite with
randomly distributed circular inclusions,
submitted
36Numerical example
- pre-existing crack (length 0.01)
E11, ?10.1
E210, ?20.3
37Numerical example
- pre-existing crack (length 0.01)
Crack paths in composite materials M. Patrício,
R. M. M. Mattheij, Engineering Fracture Mechanics
(2010)
38Different microstructure
An iterative method for the prediction of crack
propagation on highly heterogeneous media M.
Patrício, M. Hochstenbach, submitted
39Different microstructure
40Different microstructure
Reference
Approximation