Fractography : observing, measuring, and interpreting fracture surface topography

書誌事項

Fractography : observing, measuring, and interpreting fracture surface topography

Derek Hull

Cambridge University Press, 1999

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 345-358) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Fracture surfaces are produced by breaking a solid. The appearance of the surface, particularly the topography, depends on the type of material - metal, polymer, ceramic, biomaterial, composite, rock - and on the conditions under which it was broken - stress (tensile, shear, creep, fatigue, impact), temperature, environment (air, water, oil, acid), etc. This 1999 book describes ways of studying the surface topography, and the interpretation of the topographical features in terms of the microstructure and the way it was tested. Fractography has numerous applications in a range of materials, and is particularly relevant in materials science and to inter-disciplinary subjects involving materials science, including physics, chemistry, engineering, biomimetics, earth sciences, biology and archaeology. This book provides the basis for an understanding of deformation and fracture in all solids, for interpreting fracture surface topography, and for the design of clear and unambiguous experiments involving many aspects of fracture in a wide range of solids.

目次

  • 1. Introduction to the concepts used in the observation, measurement and interpretation of fracture surface topography
  • 2. Observing, describing and measuring fracture surface topography: some basics using Ketton stone as an example
  • 3. Tilting cracks
  • 4. River line patterns
  • 5. Mirror, mist and hackle: surface roughness, crack velocity and dynamic stress intensity
  • 6. Cleavage of crystalline solids
  • 7. Fracture at interfaces
  • 8. Aspects of ductile fracture
  • 9. Crack dynamic effects
  • 10. Applications of fractography
  • Appendix.

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