Extensive research has been undertaken on the use of fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) in the strengthening of fatigue-damaged and fatigue-prone civil engineering metallic structures. Evaluation of the static load-bearing capacity and fatigue life of the so-strengthened structures necessitates the accurate prediction of the stress intensity factor (SIF) for an FRP-overlaid crack in a metallic structure. This paper first presents a new analytical model for predicting the near-crack interfacial debonding process and its effect on the SIF of a centrally cracked metallic plate that is bonded on both sides with an FRP overlay. The stress distributions in both the overlays and the metallic plate, the interfacial shear stress distribution, the crack opening displacement profile, and the SIF can all be found without the need for any a priori assumption of the near-crack interfacial debonding process/pattern. The accuracy of the analytical model is evaluated with both finite element predictions and experimental data. The analytical model is then used to advance our understanding of the mechanisms of near-crack interfacial debonding, including both the initiation and propagation of debonding, as well as the effect of near-crack debonding on the SIF. It should be noted that while the study was conducted with explicit reference to metallic plates bonded with FRP overlays, the analytical model is applicable to combinations of other materials as long as the substrate plate material is isotropic, and both components remain linear-elastic during the loading process.
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