Abstract

Slant fracture is widely observed during crack growth in thin sheet specimens made of ductile materials, providing a good case for investigating three-dimensional criteria for mixed-mode ductile fracture. To gain an understanding of slant fracture events and to provide insight for establishing a slant fracture criterion, stable tearing fracture experiments on combined tension-torsion (nominal mixed-mode I/III) specimens and nominal Mode I Arcan specimens made of Al 2024-T3 are analyzed using the finite element method under three-dimensional conditions. Two types of finite element models are considered for the study of slant fracture: (a) combined tension-torsion specimens containing stationary, flat and slant cracks subject to loads corresponding to the onset of crack growth, and (b) stable tearing crack growth with slanting in a nominal Mode I Arcan specimen. Analysis results reveal that there exists a strong correlation between certain features of the crack-front effective plastic strain field and the orientation of the slant fracture surface. In particular, it is observed that (a) at the onset of crack growth in the combined tension-torsion experiments, the angular position of the maximum effective plastic strain around the crack front serves as a good indicator for the slant fracture surface orientation during subsequent crack growth; and (b) during stable tearing crack growth in the Mode I Arcan specimen, which experiences a flat-to-slant fracture surface transition, the crack growth path on each section plane through the thickness of the specimen coincides with the angular position of the maximum effective plastic strain around the crack front.

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