1981
DOI: 10.1007/bf02402849
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Fatigue analysis of brittle materials using indentation flaws

Abstract: A two-part study has been made of the fatigue characteristics of brittle solids using controlled indentation flaws. In this part a general theory is developed, with explicit consideration being given to the role played by residual contact stresses in the fracture mechanics to failure. The distinctive feature of the formulation is a stress intensity factor for well-defined indentation cracks, suitably modified to incorporate the residual component. Taken in conjunction with a standard power-law crack velocity f… Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Thus, eq (9a) may be inverted to obtain n directly from n I, and eq (9b) similarly (in conjunction with measured values of 0" m and cm) to obtain Vo from A'. It is again seen that initial crack size does not enter the results, as long as the condition co<c m remains operative [9].…”
Section: Background Theory Stress Intensity Factor For Indentation Crmentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…Thus, eq (9a) may be inverted to obtain n directly from n I, and eq (9b) similarly (in conjunction with measured values of 0" m and cm) to obtain Vo from A'. It is again seen that initial crack size does not enter the results, as long as the condition co<c m remains operative [9].…”
Section: Background Theory Stress Intensity Factor For Indentation Crmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…In the event of any pre-existent stress acting on the crack a third term would have to be included in eq (1) [4,9]. Other than to note that this potential complication needs to be heeded when preparing the surfaces of test specimens we shall consider it no further in our mathematical derivations.…”
Section: Background Theory Stress Intensity Factor For Indentation Crmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…For example, by inverting eq (11) one can evaluate Kc in terms of strength and indentation load (given, of course, an appropriate "calibration" of the coefficient in this equation), without any recourse to the measurement of crack dimensions [59]. Similarly, one can combine the K relation in eq (8) with an appropriate crack velocity function to obtain material-environment fatigue parameters (e.g., exponent n in power-law velocity function) [53,[60][61][62]. In all these analyses a proper quantitative evaluation requires a full accounting of the residual stress term.…”
Section: Strength Formulationsmentioning
confidence: 99%