Abstract

This article presents the transient thermoelastic analysis in a long solid cylinder with a circumferential crack using the C–V heat conduction theory. The outer surface of the cylinder is subjected to a sudden temperature change. The Laplace transform technique is adopted to solve the one-dimensional hyperbolic heat conduction equation, and the axial thermal stress is obtained for the un-cracked cylinder in the Laplace domain. Then this axial thermal stress with a minus sign is applied to the crack surface to form a mixed boundary value problem in the cylindrical coordinate system. A singular integral equation is derived by applying the Fourier and Hankel transforms to solve the mode I crack problem. The transient thermal stress intensity factors are obtained by solving the singular integral equation numerically. The influences of thermal relaxation time, crack geometry, and Biot's number upon transient temperature distributions, axial stress fields, and stress intensity factors are analyzed.

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