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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Numerical Studies On Ductile Fracture Of Pressure Sensitive Plastic Solids

Subramanya, H Y 01 1900 (has links)
Experimental studies have shown that the yield strength of many important engineering materials such as polymers, ceramics and metallic glasses is dependent on hydrostatic stress. In addition, these materials may also exhibit plastic dilatancy. These deviations from the assumptions of classical plasticity theories have also been observed for some metallic alloys, although to a lesser extent compared to non-metals. In pressure independent plastic solids, it has been found that the level of crack tip constraint can affect the near-tip stress and deformation fields and hence the fracture resistance. The objective of the present work is to study the effects of pressure sensitive yielding, plastic dilatancy and constraint loss on the ductile fracture processes under mode-I conditions. Further, the three-dimensional (3D) structure of elastic-plastic near-crack front fields in a pressure independent plastic solid under mixed mode (combined modes I and II) loading is also examined. A finite element study of 3D crack tip fields in pressure sensitive plastic solids under mode-I, small scale yielding (SSY) conditions is first carried out. The material is assumed to obey a small strain, Extended Drucker-Prager (EDP)yield criterion. The roles of pressure sensitive yielding, plastic dilatancy and yield locus shape on the 3D plastic zone development and near-crack front fields are systematically investigated. It is found that while pressure sensitivity leads to a significant drop in the hydrostatic stress all along the 3D crack front, it enhances the plastic strain and crack opening displacements. However, plastic incompressibility results in elevation of both near-tip hydrostatic stress and notch opening. The implications of these observations on micro-void growth and interaction near a notch tip are studied in detail subsequently. The effects of constraint loss on void growth near a notch tip under mode-I loading in materials exhibiting pressure sensitive yielding and plastic dilatancy are investigated by performing large deformation elastic-plastic finite element analyses. To this end, two-dimensional (2D)plane strain and 3Dmodified boundary layer formulations are employed by prescribing the elastic K-T field as remote boundary conditions. The results are generated for different combinations of K (or J ) and T -stress. The material is assumed to obey a finite strain, EDP yield condition. The distributions of hydrostatic stress and plastic strain in the ligament connecting the notch and a nearby void (cylindrical or spherical) as well as the growth of the notch and the void are studied. The results show that void growth with respect to J is enhanced due to pressure sensitivity, and more so when the plastic flow is non-dilatational, which corroborates with the trends exhibited by the 3D crack tip fields. However, the evolution of ductile fracture processes like void growth, plastic strain localization and ligament length reduction with respect to J is retarded in the case of spherical voids. Further, irrespective of pressure sensitivity, loss of crack tip constraint can significantly slow down void growth. The effects of pressure sensitive yielding and plastic dilatancy on near-tip void growth and multiple void interaction mechanisms in single edge notched bend (SENB) and center cracked tension (CCT) specimens which display high and low constraint levels, respectively, are investigated next. It is observed that the latter mechanism which is favored by high initial porosity is further accelerated by pressure sensitive yielding and high constraint. The predicted resistance curves based on a simple void coalescence mechanism show enhancement in fracture resistance when constraint level is low and when pressure sensitivity is suppressed. Finally, detailed elastic-plastic finite element simulations are carried out using a boundary layer (SSY) formulation to investigate the 3D nature of near-crack front fields in a von Mises solid under mixed mode (combined modes I and II)loading. The plastic zones and radial, angular and thickness variations of the stresses are studied corresponding to different levels of remote elastic mode mixity and applied load, as measured by the plastic zone size with respect to the plate thickness. The 3D results are compared with those obtained from 2D simulations and asymptotic solutions to establish the validity of 2D plane stress and plane strain approximations near a crack front. It is found that, in general, plane stress conditions prevail at a distance from the crack front exceeding half the plate thickness, although it could be slightly smaller for mode-II predominant loading.
2

Characterization and Prediction of Fracture within Solder Joints and Circuit Boards

Nadimpalli, Siva 31 August 2011 (has links)
Double cantilever beam (DCB) specimens with distinct intermetallic microstructures and different geometries were fractured under different mode ratios of loading, ψ, to obtain critical strain energy release rate, Jc. The strain energy release rate at crack initiation, Jci, increased with phase angle, ψ, but remained unaffected by the joint geometry. However, the steady-state energy release rate, Jcs, increased with the solder layer thickness. Also, both the Jci and Jcs decreased with the thickness of the intermetallic compound layer. Next, mode I and mixed-mode fracture tests were performed on discrete (l=2 mm and l=5 mm) solder joints arranged in a linear array between two copper bars to evaluate the J = Jci (ψ) failure criteria using finite element analysis. Failure loads of both the discrete joints and the joints in commercial electronic assemblies were predicted reasonably well using the Jci from the continuous DCBs. In addition, the mode-I fracture of the discrete joints was simulated with a cohesive zone model which predicted reasonably well not only the fracture loads but also the overall load-displacement behavior of the specimen. Additionally, the Jci calculated from FEA were verified estimated from measured crack opening displacements in both the continuous and discrete joints. Finally, the pad-crater fracture mode of solder joints was characterized in terms of the Jci measured at various mode ratios, ψ. Specimens were prepared from lead-free chip scale package-PCB assemblies and fractured at low and high loading rates in various bending configurations to generate a range of mode ratios. The specimens tested at low loading rates all failed by pad cratering, while the ones tested at higher loading rates fractured in the brittle intermetallic layer of the solder. The Jci of pad cratering increased with the phase angle, ψ, but was independent of surface finish and reflow profile. The generality of the J =Jci(ψ) failure criterion to predict pad cratering fracture was then demonstrated by predicting the fracture loads of single lap-shear specimens made from the same assemblies.
3

Characterization and Prediction of Fracture within Solder Joints and Circuit Boards

Nadimpalli, Siva 31 August 2011 (has links)
Double cantilever beam (DCB) specimens with distinct intermetallic microstructures and different geometries were fractured under different mode ratios of loading, ψ, to obtain critical strain energy release rate, Jc. The strain energy release rate at crack initiation, Jci, increased with phase angle, ψ, but remained unaffected by the joint geometry. However, the steady-state energy release rate, Jcs, increased with the solder layer thickness. Also, both the Jci and Jcs decreased with the thickness of the intermetallic compound layer. Next, mode I and mixed-mode fracture tests were performed on discrete (l=2 mm and l=5 mm) solder joints arranged in a linear array between two copper bars to evaluate the J = Jci (ψ) failure criteria using finite element analysis. Failure loads of both the discrete joints and the joints in commercial electronic assemblies were predicted reasonably well using the Jci from the continuous DCBs. In addition, the mode-I fracture of the discrete joints was simulated with a cohesive zone model which predicted reasonably well not only the fracture loads but also the overall load-displacement behavior of the specimen. Additionally, the Jci calculated from FEA were verified estimated from measured crack opening displacements in both the continuous and discrete joints. Finally, the pad-crater fracture mode of solder joints was characterized in terms of the Jci measured at various mode ratios, ψ. Specimens were prepared from lead-free chip scale package-PCB assemblies and fractured at low and high loading rates in various bending configurations to generate a range of mode ratios. The specimens tested at low loading rates all failed by pad cratering, while the ones tested at higher loading rates fractured in the brittle intermetallic layer of the solder. The Jci of pad cratering increased with the phase angle, ψ, but was independent of surface finish and reflow profile. The generality of the J =Jci(ψ) failure criterion to predict pad cratering fracture was then demonstrated by predicting the fracture loads of single lap-shear specimens made from the same assemblies.

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