Abstract

The stress, strain, displacement and damage fields near the tip of a crack in a power-law hardening material with continuous damage formation under antiplane longitudinal shear loading are investigated analytically. The interaction between a major crack and distributed microscopic damage is considered by describing the effect of damage in terms of a damage variable D. A deformation plasticity theory coupled with damage and a damage evolution law are formulated. A hodograph transformation is employed to determine the singularity and angular distribution of the crack-tip quantities. Consequently, analytical solutions for the antiplane shear crack-tip fields are obtained. Effects of the hardening exponent n and the damage exponent m on the crack-tip fields are discussed. It is found that the present crack-tip stress and strain solutions for damaged nonlinear material are similar to the well-known HRR fields for virgin materials. However, damage leads to a weaker singularity of stress, and to a stronger singularity of strain compared to that for virgin materials, respectively. The stress associated with damage always falls below the HRR field for virgin material; but the distribution of strain associated with damage lies slightly above the HRR field for r/(J/τ0) > 1.5 while the difference becomes negligible when r/(J/τ0) > 2. The limiting distributions of stress and strain may indeed be given by the HRR field.

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