In materials science, toughening refers to the process of making a material more resistant to the propagation of cracks. When a crack propagates, the associated irreversible work in different materials classes is different. Thus, the most effective toughening mechanisms differ among different materials classes. The crack tip plasticity is important in toughening of metals and long-chain polymers. have limited crack tip plasticity and primarily rely on different toughening mechanisms.
where is the plane strain toughness, is a constant that incorporates the stress state, is the tensile flow stress at fracture, is the tensile fracture strain, and is the radius of crack tip.
In a low yield strength material, the crack tip can be blunted easily and larger crack tip radius is formed. Thus, in a given metallic alloy, toughness in a low-strength condition is usually higher than for higher strength conditions because less plasticity is available for toughening. Therefore, some safety-critical structural part such as pressure vessels and pipelines to aluminum alloy air frames are manufactured in relatively low strength version. Nonetheless, toughness should be improved without sacrificing its strength in metal. Designing a new alloy or improving its processing can achieve this goal.
Designing a new alloy can be explained by different toughness in several ferrous alloy.18%Ni-maraging steel has a higher toughness than the martensitic steel AISI 4340. In an AISI 4340 alloy, interstitial carbon exist in a bcc (body centered cubic) matrix and show an adverse effect on toughness. In 18%Ni-maraging steel, the carbon content is lower and martensite is strengthened by substitutional Ni atoms. In addition, transformation induced plasticity (TRIP) effects in steel can provide additional toughness. In TRIP steel, matrix is metastable and can be transformed to martensite during deformation. The work associated to phase transformation contributes to the improvement of toughness. In a monolithic Pd–Ag–P–Si–Ge glass alloy, the properties of high bulk modulus and low shear modulus lead to proliferation of shear bands. These bands are self constrained and the toughness is improved.
Metals can be toughened by improvement of processing. With a high affinity for oxygen, titanium alloy can absorb oxygen easily. Oxygen can promote the formation of α2 phase. These coherent α2 particles lead to easy crack nucleation and fast crack propagation within the planar slip bands. Therefore, toughness of titanium alloy is decreased. Multiple vacuum arc melting (VAR) technique can be used to minimize the oxygen content and increase the toughness of the alloy. Similarly, phosphorus in steels can decrease toughness dramatically. Phosphorus can segregate on grain boundary and lead to intergranular fracture. If the dephosphorization is improved during steelmaking, the steel will be toughened for a lower phosphorus content. After appropriate processing of steel, crystalline grains and second phases that are oriented along rolling direction can improve toughness of materials by delamination which can relax triaxial stress and blunt the crack tip.
Metals can also be strengthened by the methods described below for ceramics, but these methods generally have a lesser impact on toughening than plasticity induced crack blunting.
where is the distance between microcracks and fracture plane, is residual stress, is the difference of thermal expansion coefficient between adjacent grains, is the temperature difference causing thermal strain, and is the fraction of grains that is related to microcracks in an affected volume. In this equation, it has been assumed that residual stress is dominant in nucleating microcracks and formation of microcracks is caused by elastic work. In order to retard crack propagation, these microcracks must form during crack propagation. The grain size should be smaller than a critical grain size to avoid spontaneous formation of microcracks. The distance between microcrack and fracture plane should be larger than grain size to have a toughening effect. As demonstrated most prominently by Katherine Faber in 1981, the toughening induced by the incorporation of second-phase particles subject to microcracking becomes appreciable for a narrow size distribution of particles of appropriate size.
where is the distance between boundary of transformed region with fracture plane, is the stress triggering martensite transformation, is the strain of martensite transformation, and is the fraction of tetragonal grains that is related to microcracks in an affected volume. The tetragonal particle size should be controlled properly. It is due to that too large particle size leads to spontaneous transformation and too small particle size leads to a very small toughening effect.
where is the coefficient of friction, is residual stress, is the edge length of grain, and is the fraction of grains associated with crack bridging.
There are some other approaches to improve the toughness of ceramics through crack bridging. The phenomenon of abnormal grain growth, or AGG, can be harnessed to impart a crack bridging microstructure within a single phase ceramic material. The presence of abnormally long grains serves to bridge crack-wakes and hinders their opening. Abnormal Grain Growth in Journal of Crystal Growth 2012, Volume 359, Pages 83-91 This has been demonstrated in silicon carbide and silicon nitride. Abnormally large grains may also serve to toughen ceramics through crack deflection mechanisms. Formation of a textured internal structure within ceramics can be used as a toughening approach. silicon carbide materials have toughened by this approach. Because the interfacial surface area is increased due to the internal structure, the irreversible fracture work is increased in this material.
If fibers have larger fracture strain than matrix, the composite is toughened by crack bridging. The toughness of a composite can be expressed:
where and are toughness of matrix and fibers respectively, and are volume of matrix and fibers respectively, is the additional toughness caused by bridging toughening. After crack propagates across through fiber, the fiber is elongated and is pulled out from matrix. These processes correspond to plastic deformation and pull-out work and contribute to toughening of composite.
When fiber is brittle, the pull-out work dominates the irreversible work contributing to toughening. The increment of toughness caused by pull-out work can be expressed by:
where is the ratio between debond length and critical length, is the strength of fibers, is the width of fiber, is the fraction of fibers and is the interface friction stress. From the equation, it can be found that higher volume fraction, higher fiber strength and lower interfacial stress can get a better toughening effect.
where is a constant between 1.5-6, is the flow stress of fibers, is the fracture strain of fibers, is the fraction of fibers, and is the debond length. From the equation, it can be found that higher flow stress and longer debond length can improve the toughening. However, longer debond length usually lead to a decrease of flow stress because of loss of constraint for plastic deformation.
The toughness in a composite with ductile phase toughening can also be shown using stress intensity factor, by linear superposition of the matrix and crack bridging based on solutions by Tada.
is the fracture toughness of the matrix, is the toughening due to crack bridging, is the bridge length, is the distance behind the crack tip, is the uniaxial yield stress, and is a constraint/ triaxiality factor.
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