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Substrate constraint and adhesive thickness effects on fracture toughness of adhesive joints

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Kai Duan, X Hu, Y Mai
The adhesive thickness effect on fracture behaviour of adhesive joints has been studied using the boundary effect model recently developed for specimen size effect on fracture properties of concrete, and the essential work of fracture model for ligament (uncracked region) effect on large-scale yield of bulk metals and polymers. The leading common mechanism responsible for the non-linearelastic fracture mechanics behaviours, such as adhesive thickness effect of adhesive joints, specimen size effect of brittle heterogeneous materials and notch dependence of deeply notched metaland polymer specimens, is discussed. These two fracture mechanics models show that the height variation of a fracture process zone (FPZ) or a plastic zone is directly responsible for any change infracture energy measurements such as the specific fracture energy Gf and the critical strain energy release rate GC. Both models show that Gf is rapidly reduced when the crack-tip approaches the back-face boundary of a specimen because only a limited FPZ or plastic zone height hFPZ can be developed in the boundary region. In the case of a thin adhesive joint, the development of a plastic zone height is limited by the thickness of the adhesive sandwiched between the upper and lower adherends or substrates. Consequently, a linear relationship between the adhesive joint toughness and adhesive thickness is established. Test results on adhesive joints from the literature are analysed and compared with the new adhesive joint failure model based on the two well-established fracture mechanics models developed for other material systems.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

18

Issue

1

Start Page

39

End Page

53

Number of Pages

15

eISSN

1568-5616

ISSN

0169-4243

Location

Netherlands

Publisher

V S P

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

University of Sydney; University of Western Australia;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Journal of adhesion science and technology.