Abstract

In this paper, the influence of plasticity graded property and thermal boundary conditions have been investigated on the fracture parameter, i.e. J-integral using the extended finite element method. A complete computational methodology has been presented to model elasto-plastic fracture problems with geometrical and material nonlinearities. For crack discontinuity modeling, a partition of unity enrichment concept was employed with additional mathematical functions like Heaviside and branch enrichment for crack discontinuity and stress field gradient, respectively. The modeling of the stress–strain relationship of the material is implemented using the Ramberg–Osgood material model and geometric nonlinearity is modeled using an updated Lagrangian approach. The isotropic hardening and von-Mises yield criteria are considered to check the plasticity condition. The elastic predictor–plastic corrector algorithm is employed to capture elasto-plastic stress in a cracked domain. The variation in plasticity properties for plastically graded material is modeled by exponential law. Furthermore, the nonlinear discrete equations are numerically solved using a Newton–Raphson iterative scheme. Various cracked problem geometries subjected to thermal (adiabatic and isothermal conditions) and thermo-mechanical loads are simulated for stress contours and J-integrals using the elasto-plastic fracture mechanics approach. A comparison of the results obtained using extended finite element method with literature and the finite element analysis (FEA) package shows the accuracy and effectiveness of the presented computational approach. A component-based problem, i.e. a Brazilian disc subjected to thermo-mechanical loading, has been solved to show the adaptability of this work.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call