Cusp catastrophe interpretation of fracture instability
DOI10.1016/0022-5096(89)90029-XzbMATH Open0695.73036MaRDI QIDQ910288FDOQ910288
Publication date: 1989
Published in: Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Recommendations
cohesive crack modelcatastrophic failuremaximum loadload carrying capacityelastic-softening materialspost-peak behavioursize-scale transition from ductile to brittle behaviourslow crack growthsnap-back instabilitystructural load-displacement response
Control of mechanical systems (70Q05) Anelastic fracture and damage (74R20) Fracture and damage (74R99) Thin bodies, structures (74K99)
Cites Work
Cited In (23)
- Energetic versus maximally-dissipative local solutions of a quasi-static rate-independent mixed-mode delamination model
- Why do we need probability distributions with fat tails to describe the surface strain evolution in reinforced concrete flexural members?
- Extended Voronoi cell finite element model for multiple cohesive crack propagation in brittle materials
- Efficient computation of multiple solutions in quasibrittle fracture analysis
- Identification of cohesive crack fracture parameters by evolutionary search.
- Structured Deformations as Energy Minimizers in Models of Fracture and Hysteresis
- Discontinuous constitutive response of brittle matrix fibrous composites
- A fractional calculus approach to the description of stress and strain localization in fractal media
- Numerical simulation of chaotic and self-organizing damage in brittle disordered materials
- Linear elastic fracture mechanics as a limit-case of strain-softening instability
- Fracto-emissions in catastrophic cleavage process
- Principles of localization in the fracture of quasi-brittle structures
- Dimensional analysis approach to study snap back-to-softening-to-ductile transitions in lightly reinforced quasi-brittle materials
- Elastic bars with cohesive energy
- Modelling strain localization by cohesive/overlapping zones in tension/compression: Brittleness size effects and scaling in material properties
- A variational approach to fracture and other inelastic phenomena
- Fracture toughness from the standpoint of softening hyperelasticity
- Scaling phenomena in fatigue and fracture
- Brittle failures at rounded V-notches: a finite fracture mechanics approach
- New crack‐tip elements for XFEM and applications to cohesive cracks
- A consistent interface element formulation for geometrical and material nonlinearities
- A coupled cohesive zone model for transient analysis of thermoelastic interface debonding
- The effect of contact on the decohesion of laminated beams with multiple microcracks
This page was built for publication: Cusp catastrophe interpretation of fracture instability
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q910288)