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Solution Of Crack Problems The Distributed Dislocation Technique Solid Mechanics And Its Applications Softcover Reprint Of Hardcover 1st Ed 1996 Da Hills

  • SKU: BELL-4876132
Solution Of Crack Problems The Distributed Dislocation Technique Solid Mechanics And Its Applications Softcover Reprint Of Hardcover 1st Ed 1996 Da Hills
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Solution Of Crack Problems The Distributed Dislocation Technique Solid Mechanics And Its Applications Softcover Reprint Of Hardcover 1st Ed 1996 Da Hills instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer
File Extension: DJVU
File size: 14.25 MB
Pages: 300
Author: D.A. Hills, P.A. Kelly, D.N. Dai, A.M. Korsunsky
ISBN: 9780792338482, 9789048146512, 0792338480, 9048146518
Language: English
Year: 2010
Edition: Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 1996

Product desciption

Solution Of Crack Problems The Distributed Dislocation Technique Solid Mechanics And Its Applications Softcover Reprint Of Hardcover 1st Ed 1996 Da Hills by D.a. Hills, P.a. Kelly, D.n. Dai, A.m. Korsunsky 9780792338482, 9789048146512, 0792338480, 9048146518 instant download after payment.

This book is concerned with the numerical solution of crack problems. The techniques to be developed are particularly appropriate when cracks are relatively short, and are growing in the neighbourhood of some stress raising feature, causing a relatively steep stress gradient. It is therefore practicable to represent the geometry in an idealised way, so that a precise solution may be obtained. This contrasts with, say, the finite element method in which the geometry is modelled exactly, but the subsequent solution is approximate, and computationally more taxing. The family of techniques presented in this book, based loosely on the pioneering work of Eshelby in the late 1950's, and developed by Erdogan, Keer, Mura and many others cited in the text, present an attractive alternative. The basic idea is to use the superposition of the stress field present in the unfiawed body, together with an unknown distribution of 'strain nuclei' (in this book, the strain nucleus employed is the dislocation), chosen so that the crack faces become traction-free. The solution used for the stress field for the nucleus is chosen so that other boundary conditions are satisfied. The technique is therefore efficient, and may be used to model the evolution of a developing crack in two or three dimensions. Solution techniques are described in some detail, and the book should be readily accessible to most engineers, whilst preserving the rigour demanded by the researcher who wishes to develop the method itself.

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