Fracture Mechanisms
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Published:2024
Abstract
Identification of the fracture mechanism is one of the principal responsibilities of a failure analyst and is an important component of any root-cause analysis. This article explores the varied mechanisms responsible for metal fracture, particularly regarding fractography. The behavior of engineering materials at fracture is based on a large number of interrelated characteristics from the atomic level to the component level. These characteristics range from ductile to brittle at the microscale and macroscale levels. Fundamental relative ductility results from the type of electronic bonding, the crystal structure, and the broader long-range degree of order. It provides detailed discussion on ductile fracture, brittle fracture, mixed fracture, embrittlement, stress-corrosion cracking.
Brett Miller, Phillip Swartzentruber, Fracture Mechanisms, Fractography, Vol 12, ASM Handbook, Edited By Craig J. Schroeder, Ronald J. Parrington, Joseph O. Maciejewski, James F. Lane, ASM International, 2024, p 118–139, https://doi.org/10.31399/asm.hb.v12.a0006874
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