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The strain energy release rate (or simply energy release rate) is the energy dissipated during fracture per unit of newly created fracture surface area. This quantity is central to fracture mechanics because the energy that must be supplied to a crack tip for it to grow must be balanced by the amount of energy dissipated due to the formation of new surfaces and other dissipative processes such as plasticity.
For the purposes of calculation, the energy release rate is defined as
where
The energy release rate failure criterion states that a crack will grow when the available energy release rate
The quantity
Relation to fracture toughness
For two-dimensional problems (plane stress, plane strain, antiplane shear) involving cracks that move in a straight path, the mode I stress intensity factor (
where
Therefore, the energy release rate failure criterion may also be expressed as
where