Abstract

SummaryThis paper presents a comprehensive study on the use of Irwin's crack closure integral for direct evaluation of mixed‐mode stress intensity factors (SIFs) in curved crack problems, within the extended finite element method. The approach employs high‐order enrichment functions derived from the standard Williams asymptotic solution, and SIFs are computed in closed form without any special post‐processing requirements. Linear triangular elements are used to discretize the domain, and the crack curvature within an element is represented explicitly. An improved quadrature scheme using high‐order isoparametric mapping together with a generalized Duffy transformation is proposed to integrate singular fields in tip elements with curved cracks. Furthermore, because the Williams asymptotic solution is derived for straight cracks, an appropriate definition of the angle in the enrichment functions is presented and discussed. This contribution is an important extension of our previous work on straight cracks and illustrates the applicability of the SIF extraction method to curved cracks.The performance of the method is studied on several circular and parabolic arc crack benchmark examples. With two layers of elements enriched in the vicinity of the crack tip, striking accuracy, even on relatively coarse meshes, is obtained, and the method converges to the reference SIFs for the circular arc crack problem with mesh refinement. Furthermore, while the popular interaction integral (a variant of the J‐integral method) requires special auxiliary fields for curved cracks and also needs cracks to be sufficiently apart from each other in multicracks systems, the proposed approach shows none of those limitations. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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