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Advances in Fracture Research : Honour and Plenary Lectures Presented at the 11th International Conference on Fracture (ICF11), Held in Turin, Italy, on March 20–25, 2005 / edited by Alberto Carpinteri, Yiu-Wing Mai, Robert O. Ritchie.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2006Descripción: vI, 262 páginas recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9781402054235
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • TA349-359
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Editorial -- ICF11 Official speeches -- Fractal analysis and synthesis of fracture surface roughness and related forms of complexity and disorder -- Scaling phenomena in fatigue and fracture -- ICF contribution to fracture research in the second half of the 20th century -- Inverse analyses in fracture mechanics -- Nanoprobing fracture length scales -- Application of fracture mechanics concepts to hierarchical biomechanics of bone and bone-like materials -- Development of the local approach to fracture over the past 25 years: Theory and applications -- The effect of hydrogen on fatigue properties of metals used for fuel cell system -- A cohesive zone global energy analysis of an impact loaded bi-material strip in shear -- Laboratory earthquakes -- Electromigration failure of metal lines -- Modern domain-based discretization methods for damage and fracture.
Resumen: The paper by B.B. Mandelbrot proposes an interpretation of roughness based on fractal geometry and describes the implications of such conjecture on fracture and other physical or financial phenomena. G.I. Barenblatt presents the general classification of scaling laws and the basic concepts of physical similarity. The Paris law of fatigue is discussed as an instructive example of incomplete similarity, where the noninteger power is not a material constant. Takeo Yokobori, the ICE Founder President, offers an historical picture of the scientific activities of the International Congress on Fracture and indicates Complexity Science as the cutting edge of advanced research in fracture. G. Maier et al. write a survey on engineering—oriented results obtained from inverse analysis applied to fracture mechanics. W.W. Gerberich and co-workers emphasize how measured elastic and plastic properties in volumes having at least one dimension on the order of 10 to 1000 nm are length scale dependent up to a factor of three. H. Gao applies fracture mechanics concepts to hierarchical biomechanics of bone-like materials. He answers some questions related to the optimization of strength, toughness and stiffness. A. Pineau illustrates the local approaches to fracture for the prediction of the fracture toughness of structural steel. It is shown that the ductile-to- brittle transition curve can be well predicted by these approaches. Y. Murakami investigates on the effect of hydrogen on fatigue properties of metals used for fuel cell systems. J.G.Williams et al. review previous studies on impact loaded bi-material strip in shear. A global energy balance solution is given to include a cohesive zone. A.J. Rosakis and co-workers report on the experimental observation of supershear rupture in frictionally-held interfaces. The results suggest that under certain conditions supershear rupture propagation can be facilitated during large earthquakes. H. Abé and co-workers make a survey of some recent achievements for realizing a reliable circuit design against electromigration failure. The growth of voids in the metal lines ultimately results in electrical discontinuity. R. de Borst presents an overview of novel discretization techniques for capturing propagating discontinuities: meshless methods, partition-of-unity property based shape functions, and discontinuous Galerkin methods. Reprinted from the International Journal of Fracture 138:1-4.
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Springer eBooks

Editorial -- ICF11 Official speeches -- Fractal analysis and synthesis of fracture surface roughness and related forms of complexity and disorder -- Scaling phenomena in fatigue and fracture -- ICF contribution to fracture research in the second half of the 20th century -- Inverse analyses in fracture mechanics -- Nanoprobing fracture length scales -- Application of fracture mechanics concepts to hierarchical biomechanics of bone and bone-like materials -- Development of the local approach to fracture over the past 25 years: Theory and applications -- The effect of hydrogen on fatigue properties of metals used for fuel cell system -- A cohesive zone global energy analysis of an impact loaded bi-material strip in shear -- Laboratory earthquakes -- Electromigration failure of metal lines -- Modern domain-based discretization methods for damage and fracture.

The paper by B.B. Mandelbrot proposes an interpretation of roughness based on fractal geometry and describes the implications of such conjecture on fracture and other physical or financial phenomena. G.I. Barenblatt presents the general classification of scaling laws and the basic concepts of physical similarity. The Paris law of fatigue is discussed as an instructive example of incomplete similarity, where the noninteger power is not a material constant. Takeo Yokobori, the ICE Founder President, offers an historical picture of the scientific activities of the International Congress on Fracture and indicates Complexity Science as the cutting edge of advanced research in fracture. G. Maier et al. write a survey on engineering—oriented results obtained from inverse analysis applied to fracture mechanics. W.W. Gerberich and co-workers emphasize how measured elastic and plastic properties in volumes having at least one dimension on the order of 10 to 1000 nm are length scale dependent up to a factor of three. H. Gao applies fracture mechanics concepts to hierarchical biomechanics of bone-like materials. He answers some questions related to the optimization of strength, toughness and stiffness. A. Pineau illustrates the local approaches to fracture for the prediction of the fracture toughness of structural steel. It is shown that the ductile-to- brittle transition curve can be well predicted by these approaches. Y. Murakami investigates on the effect of hydrogen on fatigue properties of metals used for fuel cell systems. J.G.Williams et al. review previous studies on impact loaded bi-material strip in shear. A global energy balance solution is given to include a cohesive zone. A.J. Rosakis and co-workers report on the experimental observation of supershear rupture in frictionally-held interfaces. The results suggest that under certain conditions supershear rupture propagation can be facilitated during large earthquakes. H. Abé and co-workers make a survey of some recent achievements for realizing a reliable circuit design against electromigration failure. The growth of voids in the metal lines ultimately results in electrical discontinuity. R. de Borst presents an overview of novel discretization techniques for capturing propagating discontinuities: meshless methods, partition-of-unity property based shape functions, and discontinuous Galerkin methods. Reprinted from the International Journal of Fracture 138:1-4.

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