Abstract |
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To investigate the effect of serrations
in an interfacial crack between dissimilar materials, we
introduce into the Finite Element (FE) framework a unit cell (UC)
at microscale. By assigning material-specific properties to
these unit cells, we can model various serration profiles
and distributions and calculate their effect on the
mixed-mode stress intensity factor (SIF), including its magnitude
and phase angle. The simulation demonstrates that serration
profoundly changes the local behavior of an interfacial crack.
The serrations decrease the SIF in mode I, increase it in mode
II, and, when the serration’s height-to-width ratio
increases, the mode mixity SIF increases as well. We find
that sparse serration confines variation in the SIFs to the
local peaks and that dense serrations cause widespread
undulations in the SIF’s magnitude and phase angle.
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Keywords
bimaterial, composites, interfacial crack, materials, mechanics, mixed mode, stress intensity factors, unit cells
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Authors
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