J integral

The J-integral represents a way to calculate the strain energy release rate, or work (energy) per unit fracture surface area, in a material.[1] The theoretical concept of J-integral was developed in 1967 by Cherepanov[2] and in 1968 by Jim Rice[3] independently, who showed that an energetic contour path integral (called J) was independent of the path around a crack.

Later, experimental methods were developed, which allowed measurement of critical fracture properties using laboratory-scale specimens for materials in which sample sizes are too small and for which the assumptions of Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics (LEFM) do not hold, and to infer a critical value of fracture energy J_{\rm Ic}. The quantity J_{\rm Ic} defines the point at which large-scale plastic yielding during propagation takes place under mode one loading.[1] [4]

The J-integral is equal to the strain energy release rate for a crack in a body subjected to monotonic loading.[5] This is true, under quasistatic conditions, both for linear elastic materials and for materials that experience small-scale yielding at the crack tip.

Contents

Two-dimensional J-integral

The two-dimensional J-integral was originally defined as[3] (see Figure 1 for an illustration)


   J�:= \int_\Gamma \left(W~dx_2 - \mathbf{t}\cdot\cfrac{\partial\mathbf{u}}{\partial x_1}~ds\right)

where W(x_1,x_2) is the strain energy density, x_1, x_2 are the coordinate directions, \mathbf{t} = \mathbf{n}\cdot\boldsymbol{\sigma} is the surface traction vector, \mathbf{n} is the normal to the curve \Gamma, \sigma is the Cauchy stress tensor, and \mathbf{u} is the displacement vector. The strain energy density is given by


  W = \int_0^\epsilon \boldsymbol{\sigma}:d\boldsymbol{\epsilon} ~;~~ 
  \boldsymbol{\epsilon} = \tfrac{1}{2}\left[\boldsymbol{\nabla}\mathbf{u}%2B(\boldsymbol{\nabla}\mathbf{u})^T\right] ~.

The J-Integral around a crack tip is frequently expressed in a more general form (and in index notation) as


   J_i�:= \lim_{\epsilon\rightarrow 0} \int_{\Gamma_\epsilon} \left(W n_i - n_j\sigma_{jk}~\cfrac{\partial u_k}{\partial x_i}\right) d\Gamma

where J_i is the component of the J-integral for crack opening in the x_i direction and \epsilon is a small region around the crack tip. Using Green's theorem we can show that this integral is zero when the boundary \Gamma is closed and encloses a region that contains no singularities and is simply connected. If the faces of the crack do not have any surface tractions on them then the J-integral is also path independent.

Rice also showed that the value of the J-integral represents the energy release rate for planar crack growth. The J-integral was developed because of the difficulties involved in computing the stress close to a crack in a nonlinear elastic or elastic-plastic material. Rice showed that if monotonic loading was assumed (without any plastic unloading) then the J-integral could be used to compute the energy release rate of plastic materials too.

J-integral and fracture toughness

For isotropic, perfectly brittle, linear elastic materials, the J-integral can be directly related to the fracture toughness if the crack extends straight ahead with respect to its original orientation. [5]

For plane strain, under Mode I loading conditions, this relation is


  J_{\rm Ic} = G_{\rm Ic} = K_{\rm Ic}^2 \left(\frac{1-\nu^2}{E}\right)

where G_{\rm Ic} is the critical strain energy release rate,  K_{\rm Ic} is the fracture toughness in Mode I loading, \nu is the Poisson's ratio, and E is the Young's modulus of the material.

For Mode II loading, the relation between the J-integral and the mode II fracture toughness (K_{\rm IIc}) is


  J_{\rm IIc} = G_{\rm IIc} = K_{\rm IIc}^2 \left[\frac{1-\nu^2}{E}\right]

For Mode III loading, the relation is


  J_{\rm IIIc} = G_{\rm IIIc} = K_{\rm IIIc}^2 \left(\frac{1%2B\nu}{E}\right)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Van Vliet, Krystyn J. (2006); "3.032 Mechanical Behavior of Materials", [1]
  2. ^ G. P. Cherepanov, The propagation of cracks in a continuous medium, Journal of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics, 31(3), 1967, pp. 503-512.
  3. ^ a b J. R. Rice, A Path Independent Integral and the Approximate Analysis of Strain Concentration by Notches and Cracks, Journal of Applied Mechanics, 35, 1968, pp. 379-386.
  4. ^ Meyers and Chawla (1999): "Mechanical Behavior of Materials," 445-448.
  5. ^ a b Yoda, M., 1980, The J-integral fracture toughness for Mode II, Int. J. of Fracture, 16(4), pp. R175-R178.

External links