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1996 | Buch | 2. Auflage

A Course on Damage Mechanics

verfasst von: Professor Jean Lemaitre

Verlag: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

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Über dieses Buch

A new branch of science usually develops thus. Somebody publishes the basic ideas. Hesitatingly at first, then little by little, other original contributions appear, until a certain threshold is reached. Then, overview articles are printed, conferences are held, and a first mention is made in textbooks, until specialized monographs are written. Continuum damage mechanics has reached that status now. To analyze or, if possible, to predict the failure of machine parts or other structures is one of the main goals of engineering science. Consequently fracture mechanics became one of its leading branches. It was based on the analysis of existing cracks. However, especially under conditions of cyclic loading, this might be too late to prevent a disaster. Therefore, the question regarding the precursory state, that is, the evolution of internal damage before macrocracks become visible, was then posed. One of the successful approaches to the problem was Weibull's theory which examined, in a statistical manner, the " weakest link" in the material volume under consideration. Unfortunately it proved too difficult mathematically to be applied to complicated parts or structures. Therefore it was highly appreciated by the scientific community when L. M. Kachanov published in 1958 a simple model of material damage which subsequently could be extended to brittle elastic, plastic or viscous materials under all conditions of uniaxial or multiaxial, simple or cyclic loadings, so that it may be considered nearly universal.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Phenomenological Aspects of Damage
Abstract
The damage of materials is the progressive physical process by which they break. The mechanics of damage is the study, through mechanical variables, of the mechanisms involved in this deterioration when the materials are subjected to loading. At the microscale level this is the accumulation of microstresses in the neighborhood of defects or interfaces and the breaking of bonds, which both damage the material. At the mesoscale level of the representative volume element this is the growth and the coalescence of microcracks or microvoids which together initiate one crack. At the macroscale level this is the growth of that crack. The two first stages may be studied by means of damage variables of the mechanics of continuous media defined at the mesoscale level. The third stage is usually studied using fracture mechanics with variables defined at the macroscale level.
Jean Lemaitre
Chapter 2. Thermodynamics and Micromechanics of Damage
Abstract
A classical way to formulate in three dimensions the phenomena identified in one dimension as described for damage in Chapter 1 is to postulate the existence of energy potentials from which one can derive the state laws and the kinetic constitutive equations. In the thermodynamics of irreversible processes, two potentials are introduced and identified within the framework of the “State Kinetic Coupling theory” (J. Lemaitre, D. Marquis, 1988).
Jean Lemaitre
Chapter 3. Kinetic Laws of Damage Evolution
Abstract
The physical nature of damage has been defined in the first chapter. The definition of the damage variable as the effective surface density of microcracks in a Representative Volume Element associated with the effective stress concept and the principle of equivalence has given rise to methods of damage measurement through changes in elasticity or plasticity. These concepts have been generalized to the three-dimensional case in the second chapter by means of two potentials. Accordingly, state coupling occurs between elastic strain and damage, and kinetic coupling takes place between plastic strain and damage, which allowing us to calculate strains and damage up to failure if the constitutive equations for the damage are known.
Jean Lemaitre
Chapter 4. Analysis of Crack Initiation in Structures
Abstract
The fundamental reason for studing damage mechanics is to understand why and how materials break. Together with physics, metallurgy and chemistry this knowledge allows us to improve the mechanical properties of materials and to design new multimaterials. The practical reason for studing damage mechanics is to predict when materials, as they are currently made, will break upon submission to mechanical and thermal loading. This involves the analysis of real components of structures in real or presumed situations.
Jean Lemaitre
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
A Course on Damage Mechanics
verfasst von
Professor Jean Lemaitre
Copyright-Jahr
1996
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Electronic ISBN
978-3-642-18255-6
Print ISBN
978-3-540-60980-3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-18255-6