47 research outputs found

    Stress-corrosion mechanisms in silicate glasses

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    The present review is intended to revisit the advances and debates in the comprehension of the mechanisms of subcritical crack propagation in silicate glasses almost a century after its initial developments. Glass has inspired the initial insights of Griffith into the origin of brittleness and the ensuing development of modern fracture mechanics. Yet, through the decades the real nature of the fundamental mechanisms of crack propagation in glass has escaped a clear comprehension which could gather general agreement on subtle problems such as the role of plasticity, the role of the glass composition, the environmental condition at the crack tip and its relation to the complex mechanisms of corrosion and leaching. The different processes are analysed here with a special focus on their relevant space and time scales in order to question their domain of action and their contribution in both the kinetic laws and the energetic aspects.Comment: Invited review article - 34 pages Accepted for publication in J. Phys. D: Appl. Phy

    Method of loading a specimen in testing for fracture toughness

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    Features of the brittle failure of compressor materials under impact loading

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    Determination of fracture toughness in specimens with a surface crack

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    Specific features of crack distribution during cyclic loading in liquid media

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    A method of creating circular fatigue cracks in cylindrical specimens

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    Crack resistance of material in impact loading

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