Abstract

Ductile fracture in steels relevant to the offshore and maritime industry is often characterized by the occurrence of slant fracture, which is the development of fracture surfaces that are slanted relative to the original surface of the material. The modeling of this phenomenon is important for describing ductility and fracture toughness accurately in ductile fracture simulations. This work uses a consistency model for viscoplasticity with damage softening within a strain-based framework to investigate the effect of variations in strain hardening and Lode dependence on the slant fracture area and impact energy in Charpy tests. The model is first calibrated to uniaxial tensile, single-edge-notched-bending fracture toughness and instrumented Charpy tests performed on an S690QL steel, and then a parametric study varying the strain hardening and the Lode-dependence is performed. It is seen that an increase in the yield-to-tensile-strength ratio (equivalent to a decrease in the strain hardening exponent) leads to a decrease in the impact energy and negligible difference in the percentage slant fracture area when the damage and rate parameters are kept constant. It is found that the Charpy impact energy is not sensitive to the maximum strains in the fracture strain locus and is mainly affected by the minimum strains in the locus. Finally, the rate-dependent consistency plasticity model with a strain-based damage-softening formulation is capable of simulating slant fracture behavior even in cases where the fracture initiation strain is stress-state-independent and constant.

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