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A relationship between tensile strength and loading stress governing the onset of mode I crack propagation obtained via numerical investigations using a bonded particle model
Authors:Zhenyu Han  Dion Weatherley  Ruslan Puscasu
Affiliation:1. WH Bryan Mining and Geology Research Centre, Sustainable Minerals Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia;2. Julius Kruttschnitt Mineral Research Centre, The University of Queensland, Indooroopilly, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
Abstract:Numerical models based on the discrete element method are used to study the fracturing process in brittle rock‐like materials under direct and indirect tension. The results demonstrate the capacity of the model to capture the essential characteristics of fracture including the onset of crack propagation, stable and unstable crack growth, arrest and reinitiation of fracturing, and crack branching. Simulations of Brazilian indirect tension tests serve to calibrate the numerical model, relating macroscopic tensile strength of specimens to their micromechanical breakage parameters. A second suite of simulations reveals a linear relationship between the tensile strength of specimens and the loading stress for which mode I tensile crack propagation ensues. Based on these results, a crack initiation criterion for brittle materials is proposed, prescribing the stressing conditions required to induce tensile failure. Such a criterion, if broadly applicable, provides a practical means to rapidly assess the failure potential of brittle materials under tensile loads.
Keywords:Brazilian test  crack propagation  discrete element method  fracture mechanics  fracture  tensile strength
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