Abstract

Stress evolution and subsequent cohesive cracking in the hard and stiff W-C coating on steel substrate during nanoindentation have been investigated using finite element modelling (FEM) and eXtended FEM (XFEM). The FEM simulations showed that the maximum principal stresses in the studied system were tensile and always located in the coating. They evolved in several stages. At indentation depths below 15% of the relative indentation depth, the maximum principal tensile stresses of ∼3GPa developed at the top surface of the coating along the indenter/coating interface. At relative depths range 15–60%, the maximum tensile stresses of ∼6–8GPa concentrated under the indenter tip in the coating along the interface with the substrate. At relative depths exceeding 60%, the maximum stresses gradually increased up to 10GPa and they were located in the sink-in zone outside the indent as well as below the indenter tip. The first and subsequent cohesive cracks developed when the maximum tensile stresses in the sink-in zone at the top surface of the coating (and at the coating/substrate interface under the indenter) repeatedly reached the ultimate tensile strength of the coating. The hardness profile as well as cohesive cracking is controlled by the deformation of the substrate defined by the ration of the yield stresses of the coating and substrate. Very good correlation between the experimentally obtained cracks and multiple cracks predicted by XFEM confirmed the ability of the applied modelling in the prediction of fracture behavior of the studied coating/substrate system.

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