Abstract |
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The elastostatic problem of a surface crack
in a graded coating bonded to a homogeneous substrate under
general loading conditions is considered. The coating is graded
along the thickness direction and modeled as a nonhomogeneous
medium with an isotropic stress-strain law. The problem is solved
under the assumption of plane strain or generalized plane stress
conditions. The crack surfaces are subjected to arbitrary
loadings which give rise to mixed fracture modes which can be
uncoupled due to the fact that the crack axis is parallel to the
material gradient. Therefore, the opening and sliding mode
problems may be formulated separately. For each problem, the
solution of the composite medium may be determined by obtaining
the solution of the homogeneous substrate and that of the graded
layer. The latter solution may be expressed as the sum of two
solutions, namely an infinite graded medium with a crack
and a graded strip without a crack. The resulting mixed-boundary
value problem is reduced to a set of two uncoupled singular
integral equations which are solved numerically using Jacobi
polynomials. The main objective of the paper is to study the
effect of the layer thickness and nonhomogeneity parameter
on the crack tip mixed-mode stress intensity factors for the
purpose of gaining better understanding on the behavior of graded
coatings.
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Keywords
graded coating, stress intensity factor, surface crack, mixed-mode loading, singular integral equations
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Authors
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