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Journal article

Material inertia and size effects in the Charpy V-notch test

From

Solid Mechanics, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark1

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

The effect of material inertia on the size dependence of the absorbed energy in the Charpy V-notch test is investigated. The material response is characterized by an elastic-viscoplastic constitutive relation for a porous plastic solid, with adiabatic heating due to plastic dissipation and the resulting thermal softening accounted for.

The onset of cleavage is taken to occur when a critical value of the maximum principal stress is attained over a critical volume. Plane strain dynamic analyses are carried out for geometrically similar specimens of various sizes with all parameters adjusted so that a quasi-static analysis would predict a size independent response.

Sizes ranging from 1/4 to 16 times the ASTM standard size are analyzed and two sets of material properties are considered. No size effect is seen below a critical specimen size. Above this limit, a monotonic increase with specimen size is found for the normalized lower shelf energy (LSE) and the normalized upper shelf energy (USE) for both sets of material properties.

The ductile-to-brittle transition temperature (DBTT) is found to increase monotonically with specimen size for one set of material properties, but a non-monotonic variation is found for the other set of material properties. (C) 2004 Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.

Language: English
Year: 2004
Pages: 373-386
ISSN: 18737285 and 09977538
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.euromechsol.2004.01.005

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