Gustav HultgrenMagnus BoåsenTorbjörn NarströmZuheir Barsoum
Safe design against unstable fractures in load-bearing structures is crucial at sub-zero temperatures where the brittle fracture toughness can be unfavourable, especially for high-stress designs incorporating ultra-high-strength steels. The brittle fracture toughness of surface cracks in structural steel with a minimum yield strength of 1300 MPa is, for this reason, tested in the present study for sub-zero temperatures. The realistic flaws are compared with single-edge notched specimens (SEN(B)) from thicker plates with the same chemical composition, using a representative fracture toughness for a three-dimensional crack front according to the Master Curve method. A novel approach determines the latter without considering the local temperature and constraint variation through empirical relations. The experimental result shows a difference in the reference temperature between the two specimen types, which likely is the natural variation of the manufactured materials and/or a loss of constraint due to the difference in the scaled specimen deformation level.
Zou Ji-quanHongyang JingLianyong Xu
V. G. Laz'koV E Laz'koB. M. Ovsyannikov
YIN Hao, PENG Yuchun, LI Xiaozhou
M. ElicesMariángel Pérez-GuerreroMihaela IordăchescuA. Valiente
V.F. ZackayE.R. ParkerR. D. GoolsbyWilliam E. Wood