User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
fractures- third-person singular of fracture
- defn English
Noun
fractures- Plural of fracture
- defn English
Spanish
Verb
es-verb-form fracturarExtensive Definition
A fracture is the (local) separation of an object
or material into two, or more, pieces under the action of stress.
The word fracture is often applied to bones of living creatures, or to
crystals or crystalline
materials, such as gemstones or metal. Sometimes, in crystalline
materials, individual crystals fracture without the body actually
separating into two or more pieces. Depending on the substance
which is fractured, a fracture reduces strength
(most substances) or inhibits
transmission of light
(optical
crystals).
A detailed understanding of how fracture occurs
in materials may be assisted by the study of fracture
mechanics.
Types of fracture
Brittle fracture
In brittle fracture, no apparent
plastic
deformation takes place before fracture. In brittle crystalline
materials, fracture can occur by cleavage
as the result of tensile
stress acting normal to crystallographic planes with low
bonding (cleavage planes). In amorphous
solids, by contrast, the lack of a crystalline structure
results in a conchoidal
fracture, with cracks proceeding normal to the applied
tension.
The theoretical strength of a crystalline
material is (roughly)
- \sigma_\mathrm = \sqrt
- E is the Young's
modulus of the material,
- \gamma is the surface energy, and
- r_o is the equilibrium distance between atomic centers.
- \gamma is the surface energy, and
On the other hand, a crack introduces a stress
concentration modeled by
- \sigma_\mathrm = \sigma_\mathrm(1 + 2 \sqrt) = 2 \sigma_\mathrm \sqrt (For sharp cracks)
- \sigma_\mathrm is the loading stress,
- a is half the length of the crack, and
- \rho is the radius of curvature at the crack tip.
- a is half the length of the crack, and
Putting these two equations together, we get
- \sigma_\mathrm = \sqrt
Looking closely, we can see that sharp cracks
(small \rho) and large defects (large a) both lower the fracture
strength of the material.
Recently, scientists have discovered supersonic
fracture, the phenomenon of crack motion faster than the speed
of sound in a material. This phenomenon was recently also verified
by experiment of fracture in rubber-like materials.
Ductile fracture
In ductile fracture, extensive plastic deformation takes place before fracture. Many ductile metals, especially materials with high purity, can sustain very large deformation of 50–100% or more strain before fracture under favorable loading condition and environmental condition. The strain at which the fracture happens is controlled by the purity of the materials. At room temperature, pure iron can undergo deformation up to 100% strain before breaking, while cast iron or high-carbon steels can barely sustain 3% of strain..Because ductile rupture involves a high degree of
plastic deformation, the fracture behavior of a propagating crack
as modeled above changes fundamentally. Some of the energy from
stress concentrations at the crack tips is dissipated by plastic
deformation before the crack actually propagates.
The basic steps of ductile fracture are necking
(which results in stress localization at the point on the sample of
smallest cross-sectional area), void formation, void coalescence
(also known as crack formation), crack propagation, and failure,
often resulting in a cup-and-cone shaped failure surface.
Crack Separation Modes
There are three ways of applying a force to enable a crack to propagate:- Mode I crack – Opening mode (a tensile stress normal to the plane of the crack)
- Mode II crack – Sliding mode (a shear stress acting parallel to the plane of the crack and perpendicular to the crack front)
- Mode III crack – Tearing mode (a shear stress acting parallel to the plane of the crack and parallel to the crack front)
For more information, see fracture
mechanics.
See also
Bibliography
- Dieter, G. E. (1988) Mechanical Metallurgy ISBN 0-07-100406-8
- A. Garcimartin, A. Guarino, L. Bellon and S. Cilberto (1997) " Statistical Properties of Fracture Precursors ". Physical Review Letters, 79, 3202 (1997)
- Callister, Jr., William D. (2002) Materials Science and Engineering: An Introduction. ISBN 0-471-13576-3
- Peter Rhys Lewis, Colin Gagg, Ken Reynolds, CRC Press (2004), Forensic Materials Engineering: Case Studies.
External links
- Web postings at http://www.jwave.vt.edu/crcd/farkas/lectures/Fract1/tsld006.htm
- Virtual museum of failed products at http://materials.open.ac.uk/mem/index.html
- Fracture and Reconstruction of a Clay Bowl
- Ductile fracture
fractures in German: Sprödbruch
fractures in Spanish: Fractura (geología)
fractures in Basque: Fraktura
fractures in French: Rupture (matériau)
fractures in Galician: Fractura mecánica
fractures in Ido: Rupto
fractures in Italian: Frattura
(metallurgia)
fractures in Latvian: Plaisa
fractures in Dutch: Breuk (mechanica)
fractures in Japanese: 断口
fractures in Polish: Przełam
fractures in Russian: Трещина
fractures in Finnish:
Haurasmurtuma