Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics

The failure probability of engineering structures such as aircraft, bridges, dams, nuclear structures, and ships, as well as microelectronic components and medical implants, must be kept extremely low, typically <10−6. The safety factors needed to ensure it have so far been assessed empirically....

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Main Authors: Bazant, Zdenek P., Le, Jia-Liang, Bazant, Martin Z.
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: National Academy of Sciences 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/52486
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author Bazant, Zdenek P.
Le, Jia-Liang
Bazant, Martin Z.
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
Bazant, Zdenek P.
Le, Jia-Liang
Bazant, Martin Z.
author_sort Bazant, Zdenek P.
collection MIT
description The failure probability of engineering structures such as aircraft, bridges, dams, nuclear structures, and ships, as well as microelectronic components and medical implants, must be kept extremely low, typically <10−6. The safety factors needed to ensure it have so far been assessed empirically. For perfectly ductile and perfectly brittle structures, the empirical approach is sufficient because the cumulative distribution function (cdf) of random material strength is known and fixed. However, such an approach is insufficient for structures consisting of quasibrittle materials, which are brittle materials with inhomogeneities that are not negligible compared with the structure size. The reason is that the strength cdf of quasibrittle structure varies from Gaussian to Weibullian as the structure size increases. In this article, a recently proposed theory for the strength cdf of quasibrittle structure is refined by deriving it from fracture mechanics of nanocracks propagating by small, activation-energy-controlled, random jumps through the atomic lattice. This refinement also provides a plausible physical justification of the power law for subcritical creep crack growth, hitherto considered empirical. The theory is further extended to predict the cdf of structural lifetime at constant load, which is shown to be size- and geometry-dependent. The size effects on structure strength and lifetime are shown to be related and the latter to be much stronger. The theory fits previously unexplained deviations of experimental strength and lifetime histograms from the Weibull distribution. Finally, a boundary layer method for numerical calculation of the cdf of structural strength and lifetime is outlined.
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spelling mit-1721.1/524862022-10-01T14:02:35Z Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics Bazant, Zdenek P. Le, Jia-Liang Bazant, Martin Z. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering Bazant, Martin Z. Bazant, Martin Z. multiscale transition size effect extreme value statistics crack growth rate cohesive fracture The failure probability of engineering structures such as aircraft, bridges, dams, nuclear structures, and ships, as well as microelectronic components and medical implants, must be kept extremely low, typically <10−6. The safety factors needed to ensure it have so far been assessed empirically. For perfectly ductile and perfectly brittle structures, the empirical approach is sufficient because the cumulative distribution function (cdf) of random material strength is known and fixed. However, such an approach is insufficient for structures consisting of quasibrittle materials, which are brittle materials with inhomogeneities that are not negligible compared with the structure size. The reason is that the strength cdf of quasibrittle structure varies from Gaussian to Weibullian as the structure size increases. In this article, a recently proposed theory for the strength cdf of quasibrittle structure is refined by deriving it from fracture mechanics of nanocracks propagating by small, activation-energy-controlled, random jumps through the atomic lattice. This refinement also provides a plausible physical justification of the power law for subcritical creep crack growth, hitherto considered empirical. The theory is further extended to predict the cdf of structural lifetime at constant load, which is shown to be size- and geometry-dependent. The size effects on structure strength and lifetime are shown to be related and the latter to be much stronger. The theory fits previously unexplained deviations of experimental strength and lifetime histograms from the Weibull distribution. Finally, a boundary layer method for numerical calculation of the cdf of structural strength and lifetime is outlined. Boeing, Inc. (Grant N007613) National Science Foundation (Grant CMS-0556323) 2010-03-10T20:24:30Z 2010-03-10T20:24:30Z 2009-07 2009-01 Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 0027-8424 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/52486 Bažant, Zdeněk P., Jia-Liang Le, and Martin Z. Bazant. “Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106.28 (2009): 11484-11489. ©2009 the National Academy of Sciences 19561294 en_US http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0904797106 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Article is made available in accordance with the publisher's policy and may be subject to US copyright law. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use. application/pdf National Academy of Sciences PNAS
spellingShingle multiscale transition
size effect
extreme value statistics
crack growth rate
cohesive fracture
Bazant, Zdenek P.
Le, Jia-Liang
Bazant, Martin Z.
Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics
title Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics
title_full Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics
title_fullStr Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics
title_full_unstemmed Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics
title_short Scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics
title_sort scaling of strength and lifetime probability distributions of quasibrittle structures based on atomistic fracture mechanics
topic multiscale transition
size effect
extreme value statistics
crack growth rate
cohesive fracture
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/52486
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