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  2. Fracture toughness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fracture_toughness

    When a test fails to meet the thickness and other test requirements that are in place to ensure plane strain conditions, the fracture toughness value produced is given the designation . Fracture toughness is a quantitative way of expressing a material's resistance to crack propagation and standard values for a given material are generally ...

  3. Material failure theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Material_failure_theory

    The fracture toughness and the critical strain energy release rate for plane stress are related by = where is the Young's modulus. If an initial crack size is known, then a critical stress can be determined using the strain energy release rate criterion.

  4. Formability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formability

    The major surface strain has a minimum value when plane strain deformation occurs, which means that the corresponding minor surface strain is zero. Forming limits are a specific material property. Typical plane strain values range from 10% for high-strength grades and 50% or above for mild-strength materials and those with very good formability.

  5. Fracture mechanics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fracture_mechanics

    This new material property was given the name fracture toughness and designated G Ic. Today, it is the critical stress intensity factor K Ic, found in the plane strain condition, which is accepted as the defining property in linear elastic fracture mechanics.

  6. Crack growth resistance curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crack_growth_resistance_curve

    While the C(W) specimen had gained substantial popularity for collecting KR curve data, many organizations still conduct wide panel, center cracked tension tests to obtain fracture toughness data. As with the plane-strain fracture toughness standard, ASTM E399, the planar dimensions of the specimens are sized to ensure that nominal elastic ...

  7. Plane stress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plane_stress

    Figure 7.1 Plane stress state in a continuum. In continuum mechanics, a material is said to be under plane stress if the stress vector is zero across a particular plane. When that situation occurs over an entire element of a structure, as is often the case for thin plates, the stress analysis is considerably simplified, as the stress state can be represented by a tensor of dimension 2 ...

  8. Stress intensity factor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress_intensity_factor

    This critical value determined for mode I loading in plane strain is referred to as the critical fracture toughness of the material. K I c {\displaystyle K_{\mathrm {Ic} }} has units of stress times the root of a distance (e.g. MN/m 3/2 ).

  9. Forming limit diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forming_limit_diagram

    Using an averaged value for several cross-section evaluations and 3 test samples for the same geometry a strain pair (one point in the forming limit diagram) as forming limit is identified. It is recognized by some authors that the nature of fracture and formability is intrinsically non-deterministic, since large variations might be observed ...