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Experimental study on the effect of defect curvature on the impact fracture behavior of structures using the real-virtual caustics method

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Abstract

Defects have significant influence on the impact fracture behavior of structures. In this paper, the real-virtual caustics method is used to study the impact fracture behavior of structures with elliptical arc defects under impact loading of the drop hammer, and the impact loading process is simultaneously analyzed. The research results show that impact loading of the drop hammer in this experiment is a multi-period dynamic loading process, and the fracture of specimens under impact loading of the drop hammer is an energy-controlled process. The running crack initiates under impact loading and propagates toward the elliptical arc defect. After reaching the end of the elliptical arc defect, the running crack arrests and accumulates energy, and then it initiates again and propagates toward the loading position. The greater the end curvature of the elliptical arc defect, the shorter the time for the running crack to stagnate and accumulate energy at the defect end, and the earlier the time for the running crack to initiate again at the defect end, the smaller the impact loading stress of the drop hammer and the dynamic stress intensity factor of running crack tip when the running crack initiates again at the defect end.

© 2021 Optical Society of America

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Data underlying the results presented in this paper are not publicly available at this time but may be obtained from the authors upon reasonable request.

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