Abstract

Stable crack growth is observed in notched plates of polycrystalline alumina subject to fully compressive far-field cyclic loads at room temperature in a moist air environment andin vacuo. The fatigue cracks propagate at a progressively decreasing velocity along the plane of the notch and in a direction macroscopically normal to the compression axis. The principal failure events leading to this effect are analysed in terms of notch-tip damage under the far-field compressive stress, microcracking, frictional sliding and opening of microcracks, and crack closure. An important contribution to such Mode I crack growth arises from the residualtensile stresses induced locally at the notch-tip when the deformation within the notch-tip process zone leaves permanent strains upon unloading from the maximum nominal compressive stress. It is shown that the phenomenon of crack growth under cyclic compressive stresses exhibits a macroscopically similar behaviour in a wide range of materials spanning the very ductile metals to extremely brittle solids, although the micromechanics of this effect are very different among the various classes of materials. The mechanisms of fatigue in ceramics are compared and contrasted with the more familiar examples of crack propagation under far-field cyclic compression in metallic systems and the implications for fracture in ceramic-metal composites and transformation toughened ceramic composites are highlighted. Strategies for some important applications of this phenomenon are recommended for the study of fracture mechanisms and for the measurement of fracture toughness in brittle solids.

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