SUMMARYThe present paper is concerned with the effective numerical implementation of the two-dimensional dual boundary element method, for linear elastic crack problems. The dual equations of the method are the displacement and the traction boundary integral equations. When the displacement equation is applied on one of the crack surfaces and the traction equation on the other, general mixed-mode crack problems can be solved with a single-region formulation. Both crack surfaces are discretized with discontinuous quadratic boundary elements; this strategy not only automatically satisfies the necessary conditions for the existence of the finite-part integrals, which occur naturally, but also circumvents the problem of collocation at crack tips, crack kinks and crack-edge corners. Examples of geometries with edge, and embedded crack are analysed with the present method. Highly accurate results are obtained, when the stress intensity factor is evaluated with the J-integral technique. The accuracy and efficiency of the implementation described herein make this formulation ideal for the study of crack growth problems under mixed-mode conditions.
SUMMARYThe present paper further develops the boundary element singularity subtraction technique, to provide an efficient and accurate method of analysing the general mixed-mode deformation of two-dimensional linear elastic structures containing sharp notches. The elastic field around sharp notches is singular. Because of the convergence difficulties that arise in numerical modelling of elastostatic problems with singular fields, these singularities are subtracted out of the original elastic field, using the first term of the Williams series expansion. This regularization procedure introduces the stress intensity factors as additional unknowns in the problem; hence extra conditions are required to obtain a solution. Extra conditions are defined such that the local solution in the neighbourhood of the notch tip is identical to the Williams solution; the procedure can take into account any number of terms of the series expansion. The standard boundary element method is modified to handle additional unknowns and extra boundary conditions. Analysis of plates with symmetry boundary conditions is shown to be straightforward, with the modified boundary element method. In the case of non-symmetrical plates, the singular tip-tractions are not primary boundary element unknowns. The boundary element method must be further modified to introduce the boundary integral stress equations of an internal point, approaching the notch-tip, as primary unknowns in the formulation. The accuracy and efficiency of the method is demonstrated with some benchmark tests of mixed-mode problems. New results are presented for the mixed-mode analysis of a non-symmetrical configuration of a single edge notched plate.
The present paper is concerned with the formulation of the singularity subtraction technique in the dual boundary element analysis of the mixed-mode deformation of general homogeneous cracked plates.The equations of the dual boundary element method are the displacement and the traction boundary integral equations. When the displacement equation is applied on one of the crack surfaces and the traction equation is applied on the other, general mixed-mode crack problems can be solved in a single region boundary element formulation, with both crack surfaces discretized with discontinuous quadratic boundary elements.The singularity subtraction technique is a regularization procedure that uses a singular particular solution of the crack problem to introduce the stress intensity factors as additional problem unknowns. The single-region boundary element analysis of a general crack problem restricts the availability of singular particular solutions, valid in the global domain of the problem. A modelling strategy, that considers an automatic partition of the problem domain in near-tip and far-tip field regions, is proposed to overcome this difficulty. After the application of the singularity subtraction technique in the near-tip field regions, regularized locally with the singular term of the Williams' eigenexpansion, continuity is restored with equilibrium and compatibility conditions imposed along the interface boundaries. The accuracy and efficiency of the singularity subtraction technique make this formulation ideal for the study of crack growth problems under mixed-mode conditions.
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