Fracturing across the multi-scales of diverse materials

Author:

Armstrong R. W.1,Antolovich S. D.2,Griffiths J. R.3,Knott J. F.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA

2. Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA

3. CSIRO Manufacturing Flagship, Brisbane, Australia

4. School of Metallurgy and Materials, University of Birmingham, , UK

Abstract

Everyone has to deal with fracturing of materials at one level or another, beginning from normal household chores and extending to the largest scale of observations reported for catastrophic events occurring on a geological level or even expanded to events in outer space. Such wide perspective is introduced in the current introduction of this theme issue. The follow-on organization of technical articles provides a flavour of the range in size scales at which fracturing occurs in a wide diversity of materials—from ‘fracking’ oil extraction and earth moving to laboratory testing of rock material and extending to the cracking of tooth enamel. Of important scientific interest are observations made and analysed at the smallest dimensions corresponding to the mechanisms by which fracture is either enhanced or hindered by permanent deformation or other processes. Such events are irrevocably linked to the atomic structure in all engineering materials, a sampling of which is presented, including results for crystalline and amorphous materials. Hooray for the broad subject description that is hoped to be appealing to the interested reader.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

Reference75 articles.

1. Hooke's cubico–parabolical conoid

2. Robert Hooke: A fractographic study of Kettering–stone

3. Reaumur RAF. 1722 On methods of recognizing defects and good quality in steels and on several ways of comparing different grades of steel. (Transl. A.G. Sisco from L'Art de convertir le fer forge en acier et l'art d'adoucer le fer fondu Paris: Michel Brunet Grand'salle du Palais au Mercure Galant). 63–106. In Smith CS. 1968 Sources for the history of the science of steel 1532–1786 Cambridge MA: The Society for the History of Technology and the MIT Press.

4. The structure and origin of limestones.;Sorby HC;Geol. Soc. Lond. Q. J.,1879

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