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Weight functions for bimaterial interface cracks
Authors:George T SHA  J K Chen
Affiliation:(1) Allison Gas Turbine Division, General Motors Corporation, P.O. Box 420, 46206-0420 Indianapolis, Indiana, USA;(2) Present address: Advanced Composite Enginerring, Inc, 47906 West Lafayette, Indiana, USA
Abstract:An efficient approach using the analytically decoupled near-tip displacement solution for bimaterial interface cracks presented in this paper involves: (1) the calculation of the decoupled strain energy release rates G I and G II associated respectively with the decoupled stress intensity factors K I and K II and (2) the extension of Rice's displacement derivative representation of Bueckner's weight function vectors beyond the homogeneous media. It is shown that the stress intensity factors for a bimaterial interface crack predicted by the present approach agree very well with those solutions available in the literature. The computational efficiency is enhanced through the use of singular elements in the crack-tip neighborhood.As reported in the homogeneous case, the calculated weight function for a bimaterial interface crack is load-independent but depends strongly on geometry and constraint conditions. Due to the coupling nature of the stress intensity factors of a bimaterial interface crack, the invariant characteristics of the dimensionless weight function vectors are different from those of a crack in homogeneous material. In addition, the elastic constants of two constituents can significantly alter the weight function behavior for a cracked bimaterial medium.Due to the load-independent characteristic of the weight functions, the stress intensity factors for a bimaterial interface crack can be obtained accurately and inexpensively by performing the sum of worklike products between the applied loads and the weight functions for the cracked bimaterial body under any loading conditions once the weight functions are explicitly predetermined. The same calculation can also be applied for the identical cracked bimaterial medium with different constraint conditions by including the self-equilibrium forces that contain both the external loads and the reaction forces induced at the constraint locations. Moreover, the physical interpretation of the weight functions can provide a guidance for damage tolerant design application.
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