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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International journal of fracture 86 (1997), S. 267-288 
    ISSN: 1573-2673
    Keywords: integro-differential equations in space and time ; numerical algorithm ; cohesive fracture ; rate-effect ; viscoelasticity ; creep ; quasibrittle materials ; concrete ; numerical algorithm ; scaling ; size effect ; analysis of test data.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Abstract In the preceding companion paper (Bažant and Li, 1995), the solution of an aging viscoelastic law was structure containing a cohesive crack with a rate-dependent stress-displacement softening law was reduced to a system of one-dimensional integro-differential equations involving compliance functions for points on the crack faces and the load point. An effective numerical algorithm for solving these equations, which dramatically reduces the computer time compared to the general two-dimensional finite element solution, is presented. The behavior of the model for various loading conditions is studied. It is shown that the model can closely reproduce the available experimental data from fracture tests with different loading rates spanning several orders of magnitude, and tests with sudden changes of the loading rate. Influence of the loading rate on the size effect and brittleness is also analyzed and is shown to agree with experiments.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International journal of fracture 86 (1997), S. 247-265 
    ISSN: 1573-2673
    Keywords: Fracture mechanics ; nonlinear fracture ; quasibrittle fracture ; cohesive crack ; crack bridging ; rate effect ; time effect ; creep ; viscoelasticity ; characteristic length ; scaling ; concrete.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
    Notes: Abstract The time dependence of fracture has two sources: (1) the viscoelasticity of material behavior in the bulk of the structure, and (2) the rate process of the breakage of bonds in the fracture process zone which causes the softening law for the crack opening to be rate-dependent. The objective of this study is to clarify the differences between these two influences and their role in the size effect on the nominal strength of stucture. Previously developed theories of time-dependent cohesive crack growth in a viscoelastic material with or without aging are extended to a general compliance formulation of the cohesive crack model applicable to structures such as concrete structures, in which the fracture process zone (cohesive zone) is large, i.e., cannot be neglected in comparison to the structure dimensions. To deal with a large process zone interacting with the structure boundaries, a boundary integral formulation of the cohesive crack model in terms of the compliance functions for loads applied anywhere on the crack surfaces is introduced. Since an unopened cohesive crack (crack of zero width) transmits stresses and is equivalent to no crack at all, it is assumed that at the outset there exists such a crack, extending along the entire future crack path (which must be known). Thus it is unnecessary to deal mathematically with a moving crack tip, which keeps the formulation simple because the compliance functions for the surface points of such an imagined preexisting unopened crack do not change as the actual front of the opened part of the cohesive crack advances. First the compliance formulation of the cohesive crack model is generalized for aging viscoelastic material behavior, using the elastic-viscoelastic analog (correspondence principle). The formulation is then enriched by a rate-dependent softening law based on the activation energy theory for the rate process of bond ruptures on the atomic level, which was recently proposed and validated for concrete but is also applicable to polymers, rocks and ceramics, and can be applied to ice if the nonlinear creep of ice is approximated by linear viscoelasticity. Some implications for the characteristic length, scaling and size effect are also discussed. The problems of numerical algorithm, size effect, roles of the different sources of time dependence and rate effect, and experimental verification are left for a subsequent companion paper.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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