Effect of bottom deformation on median crack repropagation after wheel scribing in glass

Author:

Murakami Kumiko12ORCID,Matsusaka Souta1ORCID,Itoh Sho13ORCID,Hidai Hirofumi14ORCID,Kitaichi Mitsuru2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering Chiba University Inage‐Ku Chiba Japan

2. Research and Development Department Mitsuboshi Diamond Industrial Co., Ltd Settsu Osaka Japan

3. Advanced Remanufacturing and Technology Centre (ARTC) Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) Singapore Singapore

4. Molecular Chirality Research Center Chiba University Inage‐Ku Chiba Japan

Abstract

AbstractWheel scribing on glass generates a vertical crack with a periodic stripe pattern beneath the wheel (hereafter referred to as the first crack). After the passage of the scribing wheel, sometimes seconds later, the first crack is repropagated with a smooth surface (the second crack). The second crack propagates to 90% or more of the glass thickness under suitable scribing conditions, facilitating the breaking process. The mechanism of secondary crack propagation has not been sufficiently explained in previous studies. Therefore, this study used analytical and experimental methods to examine stress distribution and crack propagation behavior during wheel scribing. Finite element analysis suggests that the increase in the stress intensity factor contributing to the propagation of the second crack was due to not only the crack opening force but also the bottom deformation of the glass specimen. An analytical model accounting for the bottom deformation can simulate the characteristic behavior, such as rapid deepening when the scribing load exceeds a specific threshold value, of the second crack. This study indicates that the elastoplastic deformation caused by wheel contact induces the deformation of the entire specimen, and the state of the bottom constraints is important for controlling the second crack.

Publisher

Wiley

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