1990
DOI: 10.1016/0013-7944(90)90286-p
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Surface fatigue crack growth under combined tension and bending loading

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Cited by 32 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…However, in the special cases of a plane the surface consists entirely of umbilic points, and there is no orthogonal net of principal curvature directions. Therefore, for a flat mode I crack there is no geometric constraint on permissible crack front families, and a wide range of crack front families is possible and, indeed, observed [69,84,85].…”
Section: Geometric Constraints On Mode I Crack Pathsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…However, in the special cases of a plane the surface consists entirely of umbilic points, and there is no orthogonal net of principal curvature directions. Therefore, for a flat mode I crack there is no geometric constraint on permissible crack front families, and a wide range of crack front families is possible and, indeed, observed [69,84,85].…”
Section: Geometric Constraints On Mode I Crack Pathsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Surface flaws in flat plates tend to follow preferred fatigue propagation paths, i.e. the flaw aspect ratio is a function of the relative crack depth for both axial and bending cyclic loading [7,19], and an analogous conclusion has also been drawn for edge flaws in round bars [3,5] and pipes [14]. Such analyses have generally considered a bending moment acting about a principal axis of the beam cross-section.…”
Section: Surface Flaw Propagationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The theoretical and experimental analyses on simple semi-elliptical surface cracks in plates and bars (see e.g. Görner et al 1983, Caspers et al 1990, Mahmoud 1990) were extended to more complicated crack problems as for instance almond-and sickle-shaped cracks in rods (Görner et al 1983) and corner cracks (Varfolomeyev et al 1991).…”
Section: Stress Intensity Factors For Semi-elliptical Cracksmentioning
confidence: 99%