Why Brittle Fracture is More Common in Strain-Rate Dependent Materials

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Materials with yield stresses that are highly strain-rate dependent are more prone to brittle fracture due to the insufficient time for plastic deformation to occur under rapid loading conditions. This behavior is influenced by the microstructure and dislocation dynamics within the material, which affect its strain rate sensitivity. As strain rates increase significantly, materials that typically exhibit ductility can behave in a brittle manner, similar to how a wineglass shatters upon impact while a plastic ball does not. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding the relationship between strain rate, dislocation behavior, and material properties in fracture analysis. Overall, the susceptibility of certain materials to brittle fracture is closely tied to their response to varying strain rates.
cuigm371
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Why are materials whose yield stresses are highly strain-rate dependent
more susceptible to brittle fracture than those materials whose yield stresses
do not exhibit marked strain-rate dependence
 
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Bystander said:

I did some search but with not much luck. Thanks for the link provided which is helpful but not addressing the question. I am preparing for an exam for the course of Fracture and Failure Analysis and this is one of the past questions that I have seen.
 
Not a trick question? "Answer: By definition?" Paging @Chestermiller .
 
Sorry @Bystander. No clue. This is a little too far removed from by background.
 
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Isn't this like asking why it is that a dropped wineglass will probably shatter, while a dropped plastic ball does not?
 
cuigm371 said:
Why are materials whose yield stresses are highly strain-rate dependent
more susceptible to brittle fracture than those materials whose yield stresses do not exhibit marked strain-rate dependence
Do you have some specific examples of materials?

The relationships between strain (hardening) and strain rate sensitivity has to do with the behavior of dislocations in the grains/crystals of the metal, which depends on the microstructure and crystal morphology.

Thinking about metals (since they are ductile), the yield strength depends on composition, grain size, and cold work (dislocation density). Think about the role of dislocations in the strengthening of a metal/alloy. Strain rate sensitivity is influenced by the same mechanisms that influence creep and flow of a metal/alloy.

cuigm371 said:
Fracture and Failure Analysis and this is one of the past questions that I have seen.

See Chapter 2 of this book, section 2.4.2 Speed of Loading
http://www.springer.com/us/book/9789814560375
With a very high rate of application of stress there may be insufficient time for plastic deformation of a material to occur under normal conditions, a ductile material will behave in a brittle manner.
But it is important to know why that is.

Strain rates can vary from about 1 E-6 /s (essentially static) to ~1 E4 /s, or about 10 orders of magnitude. At the upper end, one has to consider shock waves in the material.
 
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