Imposing a Speed Limit to Crack Propagation in Phase Field for Fracture

dc.contributor.advisor

Dolbow, John Everett

dc.contributor.author

Versteeg, Casper

dc.date.accessioned

2021-06-21T14:25:07Z

dc.date.available

2021-06-21T14:25:07Z

dc.date.issued

2021

dc.department

Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science

dc.description.abstract

High-speed fracture is typically a strain-rate dependent phenomenon, and it isgenerally accepted that the fracture energy is a function of the speed at which a crack propagates. Importantly, most experimental observations seem to indicate that crack tip speed limits are lower than the bulk wave speed for a given material. This means the coupling between fracture and elastodynamics is dependent on the limiting speed, and developing models that capture this limit accurately is desirable.

This thesis presents a thermodynamically consistent modification to the popularphase field for fracture framework, which includes a dissipative term that is intended to impose a limiting speed on propagating cracks. Additionally, it highlights the extent to which modifications to the existing theory are permissible.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23386

dc.subject

Mechanical engineering

dc.title

Imposing a Speed Limit to Crack Propagation in Phase Field for Fracture

dc.type

Master's thesis

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