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The role of macroscopic hardening and individual length-scales on crack tip stress elevation from phenomenological strain gradient plasticity
Authors:Uday Komaragiri  Richard P. Gangloff
Affiliation:a ABAQUS Central, Cincinnati Office, West Chester, OH 45069, USA
b Materials Science and Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA
c Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA
Abstract:This paper quantifies the effect of strain gradient plasticity (SGP) on crack tip stress elevation for a broad range of applied loading conditions and constitutive model parameters, including both macroscopic hardening parameters and individual material length-scales controlling gradient effects. Finite element simulations incorporating the Fleck-Hutchinson SGP theory are presented for an asymptotically sharp stationary crack. Results identify fundamental scaling relationships describing (i) the physical length-scales over which strain gradients are prominent, and (ii) the degree of stress elevation over conventional Hutchinson-Rice-Rosengren (HRR) fields. Results illustrate that the three length-scale theory predicts much larger SGP effects than the single length-scale theory. Critically, the first length-scale parameter dominates SGP stress elevation: this suggests that SGP effects in fracture can be predicted using the length-scales extracted from nanoindentation, which exhibits similar behavior. Transitional loading/material parameters are identified that establish regimes of SGP relevance: this provides the foundation for the rational application of SGP when developing new micromechanical models of crack tip damage mechanisms and associated subcritical crack propagation behavior in structural alloys.
Keywords:Strain gradient plasticity   Scaling   Cracking
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