the J-integral, which is widely accepted as a quasi-static fracture
mechanics parameter for linear material response and, with limitations, for nonlinear
material response;
the stress intensity factors, which are used in linear elastic fracture mechanics to
measure the strength of the local crack-tip fields;
the crack propagation direction—that is, the angle at which a pre-existing crack
propagates; and
the T-stress, which represents a stress parallel to the crack faces
and is used as an indicator of the extent to which parameters like the
J-integral are useful characterizations of the deformation field
around the crack.
Contour integrals:
are output quantities—they do not affect the results;
can be requested only in general analysis steps;
can be used only with two-dimensional quadrilateral elements, three-dimensional brick
elements, or three-dimensional second-order tetrahedral elements when used with the
conventional finite element method;
can be evaluated without requiring a detailed conforming mesh around the crack tips when
used with XFEM; and
are currently available only for first-order or second-order tetrahedral and first-order
brick elements with isotropic elastic material when used with
XFEM.
Abaqus/Standard offers two different ways to evaluate the contour integral. The first approach is based
on the conventional finite element method, which typically requires you to conform the mesh
to the cracked geometry, to explicitly define the crack front, and to specify the virtual
crack extension direction. Detailed focused meshes are generally required, and obtaining
accurate contour integral results for a crack in a three-dimensional curved surface can be
quite cumbersome. The extended finite element method (XFEM)
alleviates these shortcomings. XFEM does not require the
mesh to match the cracked geometry. The presence of a crack is ensured by the special
enriched functions in conjunction with additional degrees of freedom. You must, however,
generate a sufficient number of elements around the crack front to obtain path-independent
contours, particularly in the region with high crack front curvature. This approach also
removes the requirement for explicitly defining the crack front or specifying the virtual
crack extension direction when evaluating the contour integral. The data required for the
contour integral are determined automatically based on the level set signed distance
functions at the nodes in an element (see Modeling Discontinuities as an Enriched Feature Using the Extended Finite Element Method).
Several contour integral evaluations are possible at each location along a crack. In a
finite element model each evaluation can be thought of as the virtual motion of a block of
material surrounding the crack tip (in two dimensions) or surrounding each node along the
crack line (in three dimensions). Each block is defined by contours, where each contour is a
ring of elements completely surrounding the crack tip or the nodes along the crack line from
one crack face to the opposite crack face. These rings of elements are defined recursively
to surround all previous contours.
Abaqus/Standard automatically finds the elements that form each ring from the regions defined as the
crack tip or crack line. Each contour provides an evaluation of the contour integral. The
possible number of evaluations is the number of such rings of elements for two-dimensional
quadrilateral and three-dimensional brick elements. For tetrahedral elements, you must
specify a small radius within which rings of elements are identified for fracture mechanics
studies. A refined mesh is required to define the rings of elements around the crack front,
especially in a region near the external free surfaces. In a case where the crack front
intersects the external free surface in a model with tetrahedral elements at an angle not
equal to 90°, you should specify surface normals at all the crack tip nodes that lie on the
external free surfaces (see Normal Definitions at Nodes). This action
ensures that the tangential directions of the crack front at those locations are estimated
accurately for contour integral evaluation. The default value of the ring radius is twice
the typical element characteristic length along the crack front, which works well for most
problems. You must specify the number of contours to use in calculating contour integrals.
In addition, you must specify the type of contour integral to calculate, as described below.
By default, Abaqus/Standard calculates the J-integral.
You can assign a name to a crack that is used to identify the contour integral values in
the data file and in the output database file. The name is also used
by Abaqus/CAE to request contour integral output. If you are using the conventional finite element
method and do not specify a crack name, by default Abaqus/Standard generates crack numbers that follow the order in which the cracks are defined. If you are
using XFEM, you must set the crack name equal to the name
assigned to the enriched feature. Both the domain integral method and the line integral
method are supported when you evaluate the contour integral using
XFEM.
Input File Usage
Use the following option to evaluate the contour integral with the conventional finite
element method for two-dimensional quadrilateral and three-dimensional brick
elements:
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: Name:crack name, Type:Contour integral or XFEM
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Type:integral_type
Domain Integral Method
Using the divergence theorem, the contour integral can be expanded into an area integral
in two dimensions or a volume integral in three dimensions, over a finite domain
surrounding the crack. This domain integral method is used to evaluate contour integrals
in Abaqus/Standard. The method is quite robust in the sense that accurate contour integral estimates are
usually obtained even with quite coarse meshes. The method is robust because the integral
is taken over a domain of elements surrounding the crack and because errors in local
solution parameters have less effect on the evaluated quantities such as
J, , the stress intensity factors, and the T-stress.
Requesting Multiple Contour Integrals
Contour integrals at several different crack tips in two dimensions or along several
different crack lines in three dimensions can be evaluated at any time by repeating the
contour integral request as often as needed in the step definition. When you are using the
conventional finite element method, you must specify the crack front and the direction of
virtual crack extension (or the normal to the crack plane if this normal is constant) for
each crack tip or crack line, as described below. When you are using
XFEM, you do not need to specify the crack front or the
virtual crack extension direction because they will be determined by Abaqus/Standard. However, you must set each crack name equal to the corresponding enriched feature,
with each enriched feature consisting of only one crack. In addition, regardless of
whether you are using either the conventional finite element method or
XFEM, you must specify the number of contours to be
calculated for each integral.
J-Integral
The J-integral is usually used in rate-independent quasi-static
fracture analysis to characterize the energy release associated with crack growth. It can be
related to the stress intensity factor if the material response is linear.
The J-integral is defined in terms of the energy release rate
associated with crack advance. For a virtual crack advance in the plane of a three-dimensional fracture, the energy release rate is
given by
where is a surface element along a vanishing small tubular surface enclosing the
crack tip or crack line, is the outward normal to , and is the local direction of virtual crack extension. is given by
For elastic material behavior W is the elastic strain energy; for
elastic-plastic or elasto-viscoplastic material behavior W is defined
as the elastic strain energy density plus the plastic dissipation, thus representing the
strain energy in an “equivalent elastic material.” Therefore, the
J-integral calculated is suitable only for monotonic loading of
elastic-plastic materials.
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Type: J-integral
Domain Dependence
The J-integral should be independent of the domain used provided
that the crack faces are parallel to each other, but J-integral
estimates from different rings may vary because of the approximate nature of the finite
element solution. Strong variation in these estimates, commonly called domain dependence
or contour dependence, typically indicates an error in the contour integral definition.
Gradual variation in these estimates may indicate that a finer mesh is needed or, if
plasticity is included, that the contour integral domain does not completely include the
plastic zone. If the “equivalent elastic material” is not a good representation of the
elastic-plastic material, the contour integrals will be domain independent only if they
completely include the plastic zone. Since it is not always possible to include the
plastic zone in three dimensions, a finer mesh may be the only solution.
If the first contour integral is defined by specifying the nodes at the crack tip, the
first few contours may be inaccurate. To check the accuracy of these contours, you can
request more contours and determine the value of the contour integral that appears
approximately constant from one contour to the next. The contour integral values that are
not approximately equal to this constant should be discarded. In linear elastic problems
the first and second contours typically should be ignored as inaccurate.
For some three-dimensional models with an open crack front, the
J-integral estimates may be inaccurate from the node sets (or
elements in the case with XFEM) at the crack front ends.
The resolution difficulty is compounded by the skewness of the outmost layer of elements.
This accuracy loss is confined only to the contour integrals at the front ends and has no
effect on the accuracy of the contour integral values at the neighboring node sets (or
elements in the case with XFEM) along the crack front.
Including the Effect of a Residual Stress Field on J-Integral
Evaluation
A residual stress field often occurs in a structure; for example, as a result of service
loads that produce plasticity, a metal forming process in the absence of an anneal
treatment, thermal effects, or swelling effects. When the residual stresses are
significant, the standard definition of the J-integral as described
above may lead to a path-dependent value. To ensure its path independence, the
J-integral evaluation must include an additional term that accounts
for the residual stress field. In Abaqus/Standard the problem with a residual stress field is treated as an initial strain problem. If
the total strain is written as the sum of mechanical strain, , and initial strain, ; that is,
a path-independent energy release rate in the presence of a residual stress field is
given by
where V is the domain volume enclosing the crack tip or crack line,
W is defined as the mechanical strain energy density only,
and remains constant during the entire deformation.
The residual stress field can be specified by reading the stress data from a previous
analysis step or by defining an initial condition (see Defining Initial Stresses). You specify the step number from which the stress data in the last available
increment of the specified step will be considered as residual stresses. If the step
number is set equal to zero (default), the residual stress field is defined by the initial
condition definition. When XFEM is used, the residual
stress field can be defined only with an initial condition definition.
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Step for residual stress initialization values:step, Type: J-integral
Allowing Non-Proportional Stressing
Usually, the proportional stressing condition is assumed to be satisfied when the contour
integrals are calculated. In other words, this equation prevails:
Otherwise, you should modify the path-independent energy release rate as follows:
This approach used to account for the non-proportional stressing effects was adopted from
Lei (2005).
Allowing non-proportional stressing is not supported in Abaqus/CAE.
Ct-Integral
The Ct-integral is supported with the conventional
finite element method; however, it is not supported with
XFEM.
The -integral can be used for time-dependent creep behavior, where it
characterizes creep crack deformation under certain creep conditions, including transient
crack growth. is, for example, proportional to the rate of growth of the
crack-tip/crack-line creep zone for a stationary crack under small-scale creep conditions.
Under steady-state creep conditions, when creep dominates throughout the specimen, becomes path independent and is known as . -integrals should be requested only in a quasi-static step.
The -integral is obtained by replacing the displacements with velocities and
the strain energy density with the strain energy rate density in the
J-integral expansion. The strain energy rate density is defined as
is not uniquely defined if multiple deformation mechanisms contribute to
the strain rate. However, the creep mechanism will dominate within a zone surrounding a
crack tip or crack line, so elastic and plastic contributions to are negligible. The size of that zone depends on the extent of creep
relaxation: the zone is initially small but eventually encompasses the entire specimen when
steady-state creep is reached. Abaqus/Standard considers only creep in the calculation of . Neglecting elastic and plastic strain rates, the strain energy density
for the power law creep model with time hardening form in Abaqus/Standard is
where n is the power law exponent, q is the
equivalent von Mises stress, and is the equivalent uniaxial strain rate.
For the hyperbolic-sine law an analytical expression of is not available. For this law is obtained by numerical integration; a five-point Gauss quadrature scheme
gives reasonable accuracy in the range of realistic creep strain rates.
The domain integral method is used for -integrals as described above for J-integrals.
For user-defined creep laws the strain energy rate density must be defined in user
subroutine CREEP.
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Type: Ct-integral
Domain Dependence
Prior to steady state -integral estimates will exhibit domain dependence, even if the finite
element mesh is sufficiently refined, because of the assumption of creep dominance within
the domain specified. These estimates should be extrapolated to zero radius to obtain an improved estimate corresponding to a contour shrunk onto the crack tip or crack
line (see Ct-integral evaluation).
Stress Intensity Factors
The stress intensity factors , , and are usually used in linear elastic fracture mechanics to characterize the
local crack-tip/crack-line stress and displacement fields. They are related to the energy
release rate (the J-integral) through
where are the stress intensity factors and is called the pre-logarithmic energy factor matrix. For homogeneous,
isotropic materials is diagonal, and the above equation simplifies to
where for plane stress and for plane strain, axisymmetry, and three dimensions. For an interfacial
crack between two dissimilar isotropic materials,
where
for plane strain, axisymmetry, and three dimensions; and for plane stress. Unlike their analogues in a homogeneous material, and are no longer the pure Mode I and Mode
II stress intensity factors for an interfacial crack. They
are simply the real and imaginary parts of a complex stress intensity factor.
Although the energy release rate is calculated directly in Abaqus/Standard, it is usually not straightforward to compute stress intensity factors from a known
J-integral for mixed-mode problems. Abaqus/Standard provides an interaction integral method to compute the stress intensity factors directly
for a crack under mixed-mode loading. This capability is available for linear isotropic and
anisotropic materials. The theory is described in detail in Stress intensity factor extraction.
In this case the J-integrals calculated from the stress intensity
factors will also be output. These J-integral values may be slightly
different from those estimated by requesting the J-integral directly,
due to the different algorithms used for the calculations.
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Step for residual stress initialization values:step, Type: Stress intensity factors
Crack Propagation Direction
For homogeneous, isotropic elastic materials the direction of cracking initiation can be
calculated using one of the following three criteria: the maximum tangential stress
criterion, the maximum energy release rate criterion, or the criterion. is not taken into account in any of these criteria.
Maximum Tangential Stress Criterion
Using either the condition or (where r and are polar coordinates centered at the crack tip in a plane orthogonal
to the crack line), we can obtain
where the crack propagation angle is measured with respect to the crack plane and represents the crack propagation in the “straight-ahead” direction. if while if The crack propagation angle is measured from to ; that is, it is measured about the direction , or counterclockwise measured from in Figure 1.
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Type: Stress intensity factors, Crack initiation criterion: Maximum energy release rate
KII = 0 Criterion
This criterion assumes that a crack initially propagates in the direction that makes .
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Type: Stress intensity factors, Crack initiation criterion: K11=0
T-Stress
The T-stress component represents a stress parallel to the crack faces
at the crack tip. Its magnitude can alter not only the size and shape of the plastic zone
but also the stress triaxiality ahead of the crack tip. It is, therefore, a useful indicator
of whether measures of the strength of the crack-tip singularity (such as the
J-integral or the stress intensity factors) are useful in
characterizing a crack under a particular loading. In a linear elastic analysis the
T-stress should be calculated using loads equal to the loads in the
elastic-plastic analysis. See T-stress extraction for more
information.
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Type: T-stress
Domain Dependence
In general, the T-stress has larger domain dependence or contour
dependence than the J-integral and the stress intensity factors.
Numerical tests suggest that the estimates from the first two rings of elements abutting
the crack tip or crack line generally do not provide accurate results. Sufficient contours
extending from the crack tip or crack line should be chosen so that the
T-stress can be determined to be independent of the number of
contours, within engineering accuracy. Particularly for axisymmetric models, the closer
the crack tip is to the symmetry axis, the more refined the mesh in the domain should be
to achieve path independence of the contour integral.
Including the Effect of a Residual Stress Field on T-Stress
Evaluation
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Step for residual stress initialization values:step, Type: T-stress
Defining the Data Required for a Contour Integral with the Conventional Finite Element
Method
To request contour integral output with the conventional finite element method, you must
define the crack front and specify the virtual crack extension direction.
Defining the Crack Front
You must specify the crack front; that is, the region that defines the first contour. Abaqus/Standard uses this region and one layer of elements surrounding it to compute the first contour
integral. An additional layer of elements is used to compute each subsequent contour.
The crack front can be equivalent to the crack tip in two dimensions or the crack line in
three dimensions; or it can be a larger region surrounding the crack tip or crack line, in
which case it must include the crack tip or crack line.
If blunted crack tips are modeled, the crack front should include all the nodes going
from one crack face to the other that would collapse onto the crack tip if the radius of
the blunted tip were reduced to zero. Otherwise, the contour integral value will depend on
the path until the contour region reaches the parallel crack faces.
Input File Usage
CONTOUR INTEGRAL, CONTOURS=nSpecify the crack front node set name on the data line; the format depends on the method you use to specify the virtual crack extension direction.
For two-dimensional cases only one crack front node set (the crack front at the
crack tip) must be specified. For three-dimensional cases you must repeat the data line
to specify the crack front for each node (or cluster of focused nodes) along the crack
line in order from one end of the crack to the other, including the midside nodes of
second-order elements; it is not permissible to skip nodes along the crack line.
Abaqus/CAE Usage
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front
Defining the Crack Tip or Crack Line
By default, Abaqus/Standard defines the crack tip as the first node specified for the crack front and the crack
line as the sequence of first nodes specified for the crack front. The first node is the
node with the smallest node number, unless the node set is generated as unsorted.
Alternatively, you can specify the crack-tip node or crack-line nodes directly. This
specification plays a critical role for a three-dimensional crack with a blunt crack
tip.
Abaqus/CAE cannot determine the crack tip or crack line automatically based on the specified
crack front. However, if you select a point to define the crack front in two dimensions,
the same point defines the crack tip; likewise, if you select edges to define the crack
front in three dimensions, the same edges define the crack line. For all other cases you
must define the crack tip or crack line directly.
Input File Usage
Use the following option to specify the crack-tip nodes directly:
CONTOUR INTEGRAL, CONTOURS=n, CRACK TIP NODESSpecify the crack front node set name and the crack tip node number or node set name on the data line; the format depends on the method you use to specify the virtual crack extension direction.
Repeat the data line for three-dimensional cases.
Abaqus/CAE Usage
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front, then select the crack tip (in two dimensions) or crack line (in three dimensions)
Defining a Closed-Loop Crack Line
Sometimes a crack line may form a closed loop (for example, when modeling a full
penny-shaped crack without invoking symmetry conditions). In such cases the finite
element mesh in the crack-tip region can be created with or without seams; that is,
linear constraint equations (Linear Constraint Equations) or
multi-point constraints (General Multi-Point Constraints) may or may
not be used to tie two layers of nodes together.
If a crack line forms a closed loop, the starting node set of the crack front can be
chosen arbitrarily and the other node sets defining the crack front must go around the
crack front sequentially. The last node set defining the crack front must be the same as
the first node set. If a closed loop is formed by creating coincident nodes that are
then tied together by linear constraint equations and multi-point constraints, the node
sets must be specified in order starting from one of the node sets involved in the
constraint equation or multi-point constraint and terminating with the other node set.
Specifying the Virtual Crack Extension Direction
You must specify the direction of virtual crack extension at each crack tip in two
dimensions or at each node along the crack line in three dimensions by specifying either
the normal to the crack plane, , or the virtual crack extension direction, .
If the virtual crack extension direction is specified to point into the material
(parallel to the crack faces), the J-integral values calculated will
be positive. Negative J-integral values are obtained when the virtual
crack extension direction is specified in the opposite direction.
Specifying the Normal to the Crack Plane
The virtual crack extension direction can be defined by specifying the normal, , to the crack plane. In this case Abaqus/Standard will calculate a virtual crack extension direction, , that is orthogonal to the crack front tangent, , and the normal, . As shown in Figure 1, for a three-dimensional crack; for a two-dimensional crack, we simply
have and . Specifying the normal implies that the crack plane is flat since only
one value of can be given per contour integral.
Figure 1. Typical focused mesh for fracture mechanics evaluation.
Input File Usage
CONTOUR INTEGRAL, CONTOURS=n, NORMAL-direction cosine (or ), -direction cosine (or ), -direction cosine
(or blank)crack front node set name (2D) or names (3D)
Abaqus/CAE Usage
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front: Specify crack extension direction using: Normal to crack plane
Specifying the Virtual Crack Extension Direction
Alternatively, the virtual crack extension direction, , can be specified directly. In three dimensions the virtual crack
extension direction, , will be corrected to be orthogonal to any normal defined at a node or
in other cases to the tangent to the crack line itself. The tangent, , to the crack line at a particular point is obtained by parabolic
interpolation through the crack front for which the virtual crack extension vector is
defined and the nearest node sets on either side of this region. Abaqus/Standard will normalize the virtual crack extension direction, .
Input File Usage
CONTOUR INTEGRAL, CONTOURS=ncrack front node set name, -direction cosine (or ), -direction cosine (or ), -direction cosine (or blank)
Repeat the data line for three-dimensional cases to specify the crack front and
virtual crack extension vector for each node (or cluster of focused nodes) along the
crack line.
Abaqus/CAE Usage
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front: Specify crack extension direction using: q vectors
Defining Surface Normals
In a case where the crack front intersects the external surface of a three-dimensional
solid, where there is a surface of material discontinuity in the model, or where the
crack is in a curved shell, the virtual crack extension direction, , must lie in the plane of the surface for accurate contour integral
evaluation. Surface normals should be specified at all nodes that lie on such surfaces
within the contours requested for this purpose (these nodes are printed out under the
“Contour Integral” information in the data file). For shell element models the normals
can be specified with the nodal coordinates if the normals calculated by Abaqus/Standard are not adequate. For solid element models the normals can be specified either
directly (see Normal Definitions at Nodes and A plate with a part-through crack: elastic line spring modeling) or using the
nodal coordinates (the fourth–sixth coordinates).
If surface normals are not specified for the nodes on the crack surfaces and the
external surfaces at the ends of a crack line, Abaqus/Standard can calculate the normals for these nodes to correct any inadequate virtual crack
extension directions, . For large models, requesting that Abaqus/Standard calculate the surface normals on free or crack surfaces can increase the
preprocessing time.
Input File Usage
Use the following option to indicate that no surface normal is calculated:
The free surfaces mentioned above denote the external surfaces at the ends of a
crack line for a three-dimensional model. They are not relevant for two-dimensional
and axisymmetric cases.
Abaqus/CAE Usage
Requesting that Abaqus/Standard calculate the surface normals on the free or crack surfaces is not supported in Abaqus/CAE.
Defining the Data Required for a Contour Integral with
XFEM
If you are using XFEM to evaluate the contour integral,
both the crack front and the virtual crack extension direction are determined by Abaqus/Standard.
Symmetry with the Conventional Finite Element Method
If the crack is defined on a symmetry plane, only half the structure needs to be modeled.
The change in potential energy calculated from the virtual crack front advance is doubled to
compute the correct contour integral values.
Input File Usage
Use the following option to indicate that the crack is defined on a symmetry
plane:
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front and crack tip or crack line, and specify the crack extension direction: General: toggle on On symmetry plane (half-crack model)
Constructing a Fracture Mechanics Mesh for Small-Strain Analysis with the Conventional
Finite Element Method
Sharp cracks (where the crack faces lie on top of one another in the undeformed
configuration) are usually modeled using small-strain assumptions. Focused meshes, as shown
in Figure 1, should typically be used for small-strain fracture mechanics evaluations. However, for a
sharp crack the strain field becomes singular at the crack tip. This result is obviously an
approximation to the physics; however, the large-strain zone is very localized, and most
fracture mechanics problems can be solved satisfactorily using only small-strain analysis.
The crack-tip strain singularity depends on the material model used. Linear elasticity,
perfect plasticity, and power-law hardening are commonly used in fracture mechanics
analysis. Power-law hardening has the form
where is the equivalent total strain, is a reference strain, is the von Mises stress, is the initial yield stress, n is the power-law
hardening exponent (typically in the range of 3 to 8; is very close to perfect plasticity for large ), and is a material constant (typically in the range 0.5 to 1.0).
Results for pure power-law nonlinear elastic materials in a body under traction loading are
proportional to the load to some power. Therefore, the fracture parameters for one geometry
under a particular load can be scaled to any other load of the same distribution but
different magnitude.
If the loading is proportional (the direction of the stress increase in stress space is
approximately constant) and monotonically increasing, power-law hardening deformation
plasticity and incremental plasticity are essentially equivalent. However, deformation
plasticity is a nonlinear elastic material for which more analytical results are available.
Abaqus uses the Ramberg-Osgood form of deformation plasticity (see Deformation Plasticity); this model is
not a pure power law model, which must be considered.
Creating the Singularity
In most cases the singularity at the crack tip should be considered in small-strain
analysis (when geometric nonlinearities are ignored). Including the singularity often
improves the accuracy of the J-integral, the stress intensity
factors, and the stress and strain calculations because the stresses and strains in the
region close to the crack tip are more accurate. If r is the distance
from the crack tip, the strain singularity in small-strain analysis is
Modeling the Crack-Tip Singularity in Two Dimensions
The square root and singularity can be built into a finite element mesh using standard
elements. The crack tip is modeled with a ring of collapsed quadrilateral elements, as
shown in Figure 2.
Figure 2. Collapsed two-dimensional element.
To obtain a mesh singularity, generally second-order elements are used and the elements
are collapsed as follows:
Collapse one side of an 8-node isoparametric element
(CPE8R, for example) so that all three
nodes—a, b, and c—have
the same geometric location (on the crack tip).
Move the midside nodes on the sides connected to the crack tip to the 1/4 point
nearest the crack tip. You can create “quarter point” spacing with second-order
isoparametric elements when you generate nodes for a region of a mesh; see Creating Quarter-Point Spacing.
This procedure will create the strain singularity
The singularity cannot be created using Abaqus elements, but the combination of the and terms can provide a reasonable approximation for .
If 4-node isoparametric elements (for example,
CPE4R) are used, one side of the element is
collapsed, and the two coincident nodes are free to displace independently, a singularity is created.
If the crack region is meshed with linear elements, the position specified for the
midside nodes is ignored.
Creating a Square Root Singularity
If nodes a, b, and c are
constrained to move together, and the strains and stresses are square root singular (suitable for
linear elasticity).
Constrain the collapsed nodes to move together by specifying the same node number
in the list of nodes forming the element or by using a linear constraint equation or
multi-point constraint to tie them together.
Abaqus/CAE Usage
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front and crack tip, and specify the crack extension direction: Singularity: Midside node parameter: 0.25, Collapsed element side, single node
Creating a 1/r Singularity
If the midside nodes remain at the midside points rather than being moved to the 1/4
points and nodes a, b, and
c are allowed to move independently, only the singularity in strain is created (suitable for perfect plasticity).
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front and crack tip, and specify the crack extension direction: Singularity: Midside node parameter: 0.5, Collapsed element side, duplicate nodes
Creating a Combined Square Root and 1/r
Singularity
If the midside nodes are moved to the 1/4 points but nodes a,
b, and c are allowed to move independently,
the singularity created is a combination of the square root and singularities. This combination is usually best for a power-law
hardening material. However, since the singularity dominates, moving the midside nodes to the 1/4 points
gives only slightly better results than if the nodes are left at the midside points.
Since creating a mesh with the midside nodes moved to the quarter points can be
difficult, it is often best to simply use the singularity.
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front and crack tip, and specify the crack extension direction: Singularity: Midside node parameter: 0.25, Collapsed element side, duplicate nodes
Modeling the Crack-Tip Singularity in Three Dimensions
To create singular fields, 20-node bricks and 27-node bricks can be used with a collapsed
face (see Figure 3).
Figure 3. Collapsed three-dimensional element.
The planes of the three-dimensional elements perpendicular to the crack line should be
planar for the best accuracy. If they are not planar, the element Jacobian may become
negative at some integration points when the midside nodes are moved to the 1/4 points. To
correct this problem, move the midside nodes slightly away from the 1/4 points toward the
midpoint position (the distance moved is not critical).
To obtain a square root singularity, constrain the nodes on the collapsed face of the
edge planes to move together and move the nodes to the 1/4 points.
If the nodes at the midplane of a collapsed 20-node brick are constrained to move
together, ; therefore, the singularity is not the same on the midplane as on an
edge plane. This difference causes local oscillations in the solution about the crack
tip along the crack line, although normally the oscillations are not significant.
If all midface nodes and the centroid node are included in a 27-node brick and the
midside and midface nodes are moved to the 1/4 points closest to the crack line, the
oscillation in the local stress and strain fields can be reduced.
Constrain the collapsed nodes to move together by specifying the same node number
in the list of nodes forming the element or by using a linear constraint equation or
multi-point constraint to tie them together.
Abaqus/CAE Usage
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front and crack line, and specify the crack extension direction: Singularity: Midside node parameter: 0.25, Collapsed element side, single node
Creating a 1/r Singularity
To obtain a singularity, allow the three nodes on the collapsed face to displace
independently and keep the midside nodes at the midpoints.
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front and crack line, and specify the crack extension direction: Singularity: Midside node parameter: 0.5, Collapsed element side, duplicate nodes
Creating a Combined Square Root and 1/r
Singularity
To obtain a combined square root and singularity, allow the nodes on the collapsed face to displace
independently and move the midside nodes to the 1/4 points. As in the two-dimensional
case, if it is difficult to create the mesh with the nodes moved to the 1/4 points,
simply use the singularity.
Interaction module: SpecialCrackCreate: select the crack front and crack line, and specify the crack extension direction: Singularity: Midside node parameter: 0.25, Collapsed element side, duplicate nodes
Mesh Refinement
The size of the crack-tip elements influences the accuracy of the solutions: the smaller
the radial dimension of the elements from the crack tip, the better the stress, strain,
etc. results will be and, therefore, the better the contour integral calculations will be.
The angular strain dependence is not modeled with the singular elements. Reasonable
results are obtained if typical elements around the crack tip subtend angles in the range
of 10° (accurate) to 22.5° (moderately accurate).
Since the crack tip causes a stress concentration, the stress and strain gradients are
large as the crack tip is approached. Path dependence in the evaluation of the
J-integral may be an indication that the mesh is not sufficiently
refined, but path independence does not prove mesh convergence. The finite element mesh
must be refined in the vicinity of the crack to get accurate stresses and strains;
however, accurate J-integral results can frequently be obtained even
with a relatively coarse mesh.
In many cases if sufficiently fine meshes are used, accurate contour integral values can
be obtained without using singular elements.
Modeling the Crack-Tip Region in Shells
Focused meshes can be used, but not all of the three-dimensional shell elements in Abaqus/Standard can be collapsed. Elements S8R and
S8RT cannot be degenerated into triangles;
element types S4,
S4R,
S4R5,
S8R5, and
S9R5 can.
The quarter-point technique (moving the midside nodes to the quarter points to give a singularity for elastic fracture mechanics applications) can be used
with S8R5 and
S9R5 elements but not with
S8R(T) elements. When the quarter-point
technique is used with S9R5 elements, the
midface node should be moved to the quarter-point position along with the two midside
nodes.
If S8R(T) elements are used, a keyhole
should be introduced at the crack tip.
Flaws lying in the plane through the thickness of a shell can be modeled using line
spring elements; see Line Spring Elements for Modeling Part-through Cracks in Shells. In many cases
line spring elements provide accurate J-integral and stress intensity
values, but these elements are limited to modeling small strain and rotations. Limited
modeling of plasticity is also allowed with line springs.
Constructing a Fracture Mechanics Mesh for Finite-Strain Analysis with the Conventional
Finite Element Method
In large-strain analysis (when geometric nonlinearities are included) singular elements
should not normally be used. The mesh must be sufficiently refined to model the very high
strain gradients around the crack tip if details in this region are required. Even if only
the J-integral is required, the deformation around the crack tip may
dominate the solution and the crack-tip region will have to be modeled with sufficient
detail to avoid numerical problems.
Physically, the crack tip is not perfectly sharp. Therefore, it is normally modeled as a
blunted notch with a radius of , where is a characteristic dimension of the plastic zone ahead of the crack tip.
The notch must be small enough that, at the loads of interest, the deformed shape of the
notch no longer depends on the original geometry. Typically, the notch must blunt out to
more than four times its original radius for the deformed shape to be independent of the
original geometry. The size of the elements around the notch should be about 1/10 the
notch-tip radius to obtain accurate results.
If a crack is modeled as sharp, the finite elements near the crack tip may not be able to
approximate the high gradients, resulting in convergence problems. The stress and strain
results around the crack tip will probably be inaccurate even if convergence is achieved.
However, if the solution converges, the contour integral results should be reasonably
accurate. The convergence difficulties will probably be greater in three dimensions than in
two dimensions.
In situations involving finite rotations but small strains, such as bending of slender
structures, a small “keyhole” around the crack tip should be modeled. If the hole is small,
the results will not be affected significantly and problems in dealing with the singular
strains at the crack tip will be avoided.
Using Constraints with the Conventional Finite Element Method
General multi-point constraints and linear constraint equations (About Kinematic Constraints) should not be
used on nodes in the mesh regions where contour integrals are calculated unless the nodes
involved in the constraint are located at the same point. The nodes at the crack tip of a
focused mesh can be tied together using multi-point constraints without adversely affecting
the contour integral calculations. Tying these nodes will change the singularity at the
crack tip, but path independence of the contour integral will be maintained. In addition,
path independence of the contour integrals will not be affected if two faces of a model are
joined using MPC type
TIE or a linear constraint equation, provided that all
nodes of the two faces are coincident. Using multi-point constraints for mesh refinement or
for applying symmetry/antisymmetry boundary conditions within the contour integral region
will result in path dependence of the contour integrals. No warning or error messages are
provided if this rule is violated.
Procedures
You can request contour integrals in fracture mechanics problems that were modeled using
the following procedures:
static (Static Stress Analysis) with both
XFEM and the conventional finite element methods;
quasi-static (Quasi-Static Analysis) with the conventional finite element
method only;
Contour integrals can be requested only in general analysis steps: they are not calculated
in linear perturbation analyses (General and Perturbation Procedures).
A crack analysis with pressure applied on the crack surfaces might give inaccurate contour
integral values if geometric nonlinearity is included in a step. Similarly, the calculated
results of the stress intensity factors and T-stress might not be accurate if geometric
nonlinearity is included in a step.
Loads
Contour integral calculations include the following distributed load types:
thermal loads;
distributed loads, including crack face pressure and traction loads on continuum
elements as well as those applied using user subroutine DLOAD and UTRACLOAD;
distributed loads, including surface traction loads and crack face edge loads on shell
elements as well as those applied using user subroutine UTRACLOAD;
uniform and nonuniform body forces; and
centrifugal loads on continuum and shell elements.
Contributions to the contour integral due to concentrated loads in the domain are not
included; instead, the mesh must be modified to include a small element and a distributed
load must be applied to this element.
Contributions due to contact forces are not included.
Material Options
J-integral calculations are valid for linear elastic, nonlinear
elastic, and elastic-plastic materials. Plastic behavior can be modeled as nonlinear elastic
(Deformation Plasticity), but the results
are generally best if the material is modeled by incremental plasticity and is subject to
proportional, monotonic traction loading.
If unloading has taken place in the plastic zone around the crack tip, the
J-integral will not be valid except in very limited cases.
The stress intensity factor calculation is valid for cracks in homogeneous, linear elastic
materials. It is also valid for an interfacial crack between two different isotropic linear
elastic materials. It is not valid for any other types of materials, including user-defined
materials.
The crack propagation direction is valid only for homogeneous, isotropic linear elastic
materials.
The T-stress is valid only for homogeneous, isotropic linear elastic
materials. Although the T-stress is calculated using the linear elastic
material properties of the body with a crack, it is usually used with the
J-integral calculated using the elastic-plastic material properties of
the body (see T-stress extraction).
If there is material discontinuity, the normal to the material discontinuity line must be
specified for all nodes on the material discontinuity that will lie in a contour integral
domain. The normal can be specified by defining user-specified normals (see Normal Definitions at Nodes) for the elements
on both sides of the discontinuity or by using nodal normal coordinates for the nodes on the
discontinuity. Contour integral calculations cannot be performed for a crack with a material
discontinuity line passing through its tip (except for an interfacial crack between two
different materials). Therefore, you should be careful when specifying a normal that is not
perpendicular to the virtual crack extension direction, , for the nodes at the crack tip.
Elements
When used with XFEM, the contour integral can be evaluated
only in first-order or second-order tetrahedral and first-order brick elements. The
following paragraphs apply only to the conventional finite element method.
The contour integral evaluation capability in Abaqus/Standard assumes that the elements that lie within the domain used for the calculations are
quadrilateral or triangular elements in two-dimensional or shell models or are bricks or
second-order tetrahedral elements in continuum three-dimensional models. You should not use
wedges in the mesh that is included in the contour integral regions. When the elements around the crack tip are generated in Abaqus/CAE, wedge elements are converted to collapsed hexahedral elements. The elements within
the contour domain should be of the same type.
In shell structures the contour integrals calculated by Abaqus/Standard are contour independent only if the deformation mode around the crack tip is primarily
membrane. If there are significant bending or transverse shear effects in the domain, the
contour integrals may not be contour independent and contour integral values should be
obtained directly from the displacements and/or the stresses.
Generalized plane strain elements, generalized axisymmetric elements with twist,
asymmetric-axisymmetric elements, membrane elements, and cylindrical elements should not be
used in the contour integral regions.
The domain associated with each contour is calculated automatically. The nodes belonging to
each domain can be printed in the data file; see Controlling the Amount of analysis input file processor Information Written to the Data File. If you are using
the conventional contour integral method, for each domain Abaqus/Standard creates a new node set in the output database to include these nodes; you can view these node sets in Abaqus/CAE. In addition, new node sets are created in the output database for nodes on crack
surfaces and on free surfaces whose nodal normals are calculated by Abaqus/Standard.
Contour integrals cannot be recovered from the restart file as described in About Output.
You should not request element output extrapolated to the nodes (Element Output) for second-order
elements with one collapsed side in two dimensions or one collapsed face in three
dimensions.
Default Contour Integral Output
By default, the contour integral values are written to the data file and to the output
database file. The following naming convention is used for contour integrals written to
the output database:
integral-type: abbrev-integral-type at history-output-request-name_crack-name_internal-crack-tip-node-set-name__Contour_contour-number
where integral-type can be
Crack propagation direction (Cpd)
J-integral (J)
J-integral estimated from Ks (JKs)
Stress intensity factor K1 (K1)
Stress intensity factor K2 (K2)
T-stress (T)
For example,
J-integral: J at JINT_CRACK_CRACKTIP-1__Contour_1
Writing the Contour Integrals to the Results File
You can choose to write the contour integral values to the results file in addition to
the data file.
Input File Usage
Use the following option to write the contour integrals to the results file instead
of the data file:
You cannot write contour integrals to the results file from Abaqus/CAE.
Controlling the Output Frequency
You can control the output frequency, in increments, of contour integrals. By default,
the crack-tip location and associated quantities will be printed every increment. Specify
an output frequency of 0 to suppress contour integral output.
The output frequency for contour integral output to the output database is controlled by
the larger of the frequency values specified for history output to the output database (see Output to the Output Database) or for contour integral output. If you specify an
output frequency of 0 for the history output to the output database, contour integral
values will not be written to the output database.
Step module: history output request editor: Domain: Crack: crack name, Number of contours:n, Save output at: f
Requesting Field Output of the Contour Integral
For the conventional contour integral method, if contours are specified, you can request the averaged value of contour
integrals over contours (starting from contour number ) as nodal field output written to the output database.
Nodal field output is not available for the XFEM-based
contour integral method.
The following nodal field output variables are available:
Lei, Y., “J-Integral
Evaluation for Cases Involving Non-proportional
Stressing,” Engineering Fracture
Mechanics, vol. 72, pp. 577–596, 2005.
Lei, Y., N. P. O'Dowd, and G. A. Webster, “Fracture
Mechanics Analysis of a Crack in a Residual Stress
Field,” International Journal of
Fracture, vol. 106, pp. 195–216, 2000.