Abstract
For thin structures, fatigue crack growth rates may vary with the structure's thickness for a given stress intensity factor range. This effect is mainly due to the change in the nature of the plastic deformation when the plastic zone size becomes comparable with, or greater than, the cross‐sectional thickness. Variations in the constraint affect both the crack tip plastic blunting behaviour as well as the fatigue crack closure level. Approximate expressions are constructed for the constraint factor based on asymptotic values and numerical results, which are shown to correlate well with finite element results. It is demonstrated that the present results not only permit predictions of the specimen thickness effects on fatigue crack propagation under spectrum loading, but also eliminate the need to determine the constraint factor by curve‐fitting crack growth data.
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More From: Fatigue & Fracture of Engineering Materials & Structures
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