Abstract

The problem of a crack growing steadily and quasi-statically along a brittle\\ductile interface under plane strain, mixed mode, and small scale yielding conditions is considered. The ductile material is assumed to be characterized by the J 2-flow theory of plasticity with linear strain hardening, while the brittle material is assumed to be linear elastic. A displacement-based finite element method, exploiting the convective nature of the problem, is utilized to solve the relevant boundary value problem. In Part I of this work, the corresponding asymptotic problem was solved. This paper addresses the full-field problem in order to validate the asymptotic solutions, and to explore the physical implications of the results. The numerical full-field results are found to be in good agreement with the analytical asymptotic solutions. In particular, the full-field results strongly suggest that the stress fields in the vicinity of the crack tip are variable-separable of the power singular type; and also that the mode mix of the near-tip stress fields is, to a large extent, independent of the applied elastic mode mix. The amplitude (the plastic stress intensity factor) and the regions of validity of the asymptotic fields are estimated from the full-field results, and are observed to be strongly dependent on the applied mode mix. The remote elastic loading fields appear to influence the near-tip fields, primarily, through the plastic stress intensity factor. The present work also explores the suggestion made by Bose and Ponte Castaneda, 1992 that the solutions to the small scale yielding problem may be used in the context of a standard crack growth criterion, requiring that continued growth take place with a fixed near-tip crack opening profile, to obtain theoretical predictions for the dependence of interfacial toughness on the applied mode mix. Based on the numerical results, predictions for mixed mode toughness of the brittle\\ductile interface are reported. The results, which are in qualitative agreement with available experimental data and also with some recent theoretical results, predict a strong dependence of interfacial toughness on mode mix. This suggests that ductility provides the main operating mechanism for explaining the dependence of interfacial toughness on the mode mix of the applied loading fields, during steady crack growth.

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