On the Fracture Toughness of Advanced Materials
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory · University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
Abstract Few engineering materials are limited by their strength; rather they are limited by their resistance to fracture or fracture toughness. It is not by accident that most critical structures, such as bridges, ships, nuclear pressure vessels and so forth, are manufactured from materials that are comparatively low in strength but high in toughness. Indeed, in many classes of materials, strength and toughness are almost mutually exclusive. From a fracture‐mechanics perspective, the ability of a microstructure to develop toughening mechanisms acting either ahead or behind the crack tip can result in resistance‐curve (R‐curve) behavior where the fracture resistance actually increases with crack extension; the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.99
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Fracture toughness
- Materials science
- Toughness
- Toughening
- Fracture mechanics
- Composite material
- Microstructure
- Crack growth resistance curve