Fracture resistance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fracture Resistance is an existing term used very widely and for many years in the dental reconstruction industry.[1] [2] [3] as applied to e.g. dental inlays as used in dental restoration. The same term has also been used since 1986 in oil drilling operations.[4] [5] where the 'resistance' is an effect of drilling mud leakage. The same term is increasingly being used in some metallurgically-adjacent technical conferences [6]

Engineers and materials scientists use the more precise terms fracture toughness, critical stress intensity factor and crack growth resistance to describe how structures and materials fail by fast fracture and by fatigue. These are defined by the theory of fracture mechanics .

References[edit]

  1. ^ The fracture resistance of dental materials, National Library of Medicine, doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2842.1995.tb00236.x.
  2. ^ Endodontic instrument fracture British Dental Journal volume 214, pages341–348 (2013)
  3. ^ Fracture resistance and flexural strength of endodontically treated teeth Gamal, W., Abdou, A. & Salem, G.A. Fracture resistance and flexural strength of endodontically treated teeth restored by different short fiber resin composites: a preclinical study. Bull Natl Res Cent 46, 276 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1186/s42269-022-00964-0
  4. ^ What Does Fracture Resistance Mean? Trenchlesspedia dictionary
  5. ^ Formation Pore Pressure and Fracture Resistance Ch.6 in "Applied Drilling Engineering" (1986) 978-1-61399-919-6
  6. ^ International Conference on Hydrogen Safety slide7, Compatibility and Suitability of Existing Steel Pipelines. September 13, 2017, Hamburg, Germany