Critical distance default values for structural steels and a simple formulation to estimate the apparent fracture toughness in u-notched conditions

Paper Info

Revista

Metals

Año de publicación

2018

Tematica

Mecánica de la Fractura

Integridad estructural / análisis de fallo

Materiales metálicos

Critical distance default values for structural steels and a simple formulation to estimate the apparent fracture toughness in u-notched conditions

Cicero González, Sergio | Fuentes Benito, Juan Diego | Procopio, I. | Madrazo Acebes, Virginia | González, Pablo |

Abstract

The structural integrity assessment of components containing notch-type defects has been the subject of extensive research in the last few decades. The assumption that notches behave as cracks is generally too conservative, making it necessary to develop assessment methodologies that consider the specific nature of notches, providing accurate safe predictions of failure loads or defect sizes. Among the different theories or models that have been developed to address this issue the Theory of Critical Distances (TCD) is one of the most widely applied and extended. This theory is actually a group of methodologies that have in common the use of the material toughness and a length parameter that depends on the material (the critical distance; L). This length parameter requires calibration in those situations where there is a certain non-linear behavior on the micro or the macro scale. This calibration process constitutes the main practical barrier for an extensive use of the TCD in structural steels. The main purpose of this paper is to provide, through a set of proposed default values, a simple methodology to accurately estimate both the critical distance of structural steels and the corresponding apparent fracture toughness predictions derived from the TCD.

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