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Fracture, Fatigue, Corrosion and Failure Analysis of Medical Devices Health Canada, March 7, 2012 Brad James Ph.D., P.E. Exponent Failure Analysis
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Outline Fracture Structure and bonding of materials Stress effects Fracture of cracked members Fracture mechanics applications for medical devices
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Fracture – Structure and Bonding Crystal Structure Unit cell – the smallest grouping of atoms to form a repeatable lattice to form a particular, perfect crystal Seven types of unit cells: cubic, tetragonal, hexagonal, orthorhombic, monoclinic, triclinic
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Fracture – Structure and Bonding Examples: different cubic unit cells Primitive cubicBody-centered cubicFace-centered cubic
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Fracture – Structure and Bonding Crystal structure imperfections 1.Reduce strength in brittle materials 2.Allow “slip” (permanent deformation) in ductile metals Examples: Dislocations Grain boundaries Vacancies Inclusions
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Fracture – Structure and Bonding Example: single crystal iron whiskers have relatively low numbers of imperfections Can observe tensile strengths up to E/20 (1,500 ksi)
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Fracture – Structure and Bonding How do these imperfections affect strength? Brittle materials: imperfections allow for areas of weaker bonds (see force v. bond distance plot) Ductile materials: dislocations allow slip along planes (called slip planes), allow ductile flow of material under sufficient stress
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Fracture – Structure and Bonding Dislocation slip: Occurs most easily on close-packed planes Forms slip bands – deformation concentrated by many dislocations along a slip plane
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Fracture – Structure and Bonding
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Slip bands:
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Fracture – Stress Considerations Definitions: Tensile Stress σ1σ1 Shear Stress τ xy τ yx
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Fracture – Stress Considerations General Rule Brittle fracture – governed by breaking bonds at imperfections, fracture plane is perpendicular to principal (maximum tensile) stress Ductile fracture – governed by dislocation motion, fracture plane is parallel to maximum shear stress
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Fracture – Stress Considerations
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Effect of notches –Brittle materials –Ductile materials
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Fracture – Stress Considerations Brittle materials –“notch sensitive” Ductile materials –“Notch strengthening” –For a given cross section (equivalent d), addition of a notch increases the yield and ultimate strength Notch changes local stress state
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Fracture – Stress Considerations Yield criteria – which allow the determination of yielding in complex stress states (such as von Mises or maximum shear stress criteria) explain why: τ y = (σ 1 - σ 3 )/2 (maximum shear stress criteria) As σ 3 increases, σ 1 needs to increase to cause yielding
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Fracture – Stress Considerations Stress Concentration Consider semi- infinite plate with elliptical hole σ max = K t σ nominal K t = stress concentration
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Fracture – Stress Considerations Inglis Solution K t =1+2(c/d) K t =1+2(c/ρ) 1/2 =radius max =(1+2(c/ρ) 1/2 ) σ nominal Many different stress concentration factors for various geometries, excellent source for solutions is: Peterson’s Stress Concentration Factors, by Walter D. Pilkey, © 1997, John Wiley and Sons
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Fracture – Stress Considerations Inglis Solution σ max = (1+2(c/ρ) 1/2 ) σ nominal What happens when notch becomes more crack like? ρ approaches zero, σ max approaches infinity Impossible! Therefore, for sharp cracks, stress concentration approach does not work!
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Fracture – Stress Intensity Approach Stress intensity factor, K, characterizes the stress field ahead of a sharp crack Stress intensity approach is the basis for linear-elastic fracture mechanics (LEFM) Stress intensity, K, is used for members with cracks, not the same thing as stress concentration, K t !!
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Fracture – Stress Intensity Approach General form for stress-intensity factor K = σ (πa) 1/2 f(a/w) where: σ=global stress a=crack length f(a/w)=geometric factor that depends upon remaining thickness and crack length Units: ksi(in) 1/2, MPa(m) 1/2
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Fracture – Stress Intensity Approach Stress-intensity factor K, is dependent upon geometry, strain rate, temperature
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Fracture – Stress Intensity Approach Plane strain = highly constrained condition, three- dimensional stress state Plane stress = less constrained condition, near surfaces and in thin, ductile sections, two- dimensional stress condition Plane StrainPlane Stress
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Fracture – Stress Intensity Approach
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Define critical stress intensity factor, K C, called “critical fracture toughness” K C is the critical value of K, below which, brittle fracture will not occur K C is independent of specimen size and geometry, therefore K C is a material property K C is the “worst case” (plane strain) fracture toughness
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Fracture – Stress Intensity Approach
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K C is often referred to as K IC – the critical fracture toughness in Mode I (crack opening) crack extension Three modes of crack extension:
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Fracture – Stress Intensity Approach Flaw tolerant design: we can tolerate cracks or flaws in our structure as long as we do not allow them to develop stress intensity greater than the plane strain fracture toughness (K IC ) Need K IC fracture toughness values for design materials – determined by testing per ASTM E399 Need relationship for K as a function of crack length for pertinent geometries and stress: can be determined from various handbooks and software
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