Abstract

This paper describes a modeling approach for analyzing mixed-mode crack growth events in ductile thin-sheet materials under large deformation and combined in-plane and out-of-plane loading conditions. The remote mixed-mode I/III loading leads to local mixed-mode I/II/III fields near the crack front. Making use of full-field surface deformation measurements, finite element models of mixed-mode I/III stable tearing events in thin-sheet specimens have been developed. Model predictions have been compared with experimental measurements (a) just prior to initial crack growth and (b) during stable tearing crack growth. Analyses of curvilinear crack growth events are carried out using a nodal release option or a local re-meshing option and using a generalized CTOD parameter with experimentally measured critical CTOD values. Results of this study suggest that the modeling approach can be employed to numerically re-construct experimental crack growth events in thin plate specimens. This offers a viable means of analyzing and understanding the mixed-mode crack growth events and provides a tool for further investigations of 3D crack front fields (which are otherwise unavailable experimentally) and for the study of fracture criteria for stable tearing events.

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