MSU ME Bagley College of Engineering at MSU Mississippi State University

S. R. Daniewicz

S. R. Daniewicz

Professor and Interim Head
Mechanical Engineering Department
Mail Stop 9552, 210 Carpenter Building
Mississippi State University
Mississippi State, MS 39762
Telephone: (662) 325-7322
Fax: (662) 325-7223
E-mail: daniewicz@me.msstate.edu

EDUCATION

EXPERIENCE RECORD

Dr. Daniewicz holds degrees in both Welding Engineering and Mechanical Engineering from Ohio State University. He is a member of the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) E-8 Committee on Fatigue and Fracture. He received their highly prestigious Keith Miller Young Investigator Award in 1999.  He is also a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME), the American Welding Society (AWS), and Sigma Xi. He has authored or co-authored 22 refereed technical publications regarding fracture mechanics and fatigue.

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SPECIALTY AREAS

Fracture Mechanics and Fatigue

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RESEARCH SUMMARY

Dr. Daniewicz's research thrusts include the development of modified strip-yield models and the use of finite element analysis for prediction of fatigue crack closure and fatigue crack propagation.Back to top

RESEARCH ACTIVITIES

Surface Flaw Modeling.  Surface cracks are commonly encountered in engineering practice, and current fatigue crack growth methodologies for these types of flaws neglect plasticity induced crack closure. Under some conditions such approaches may produce inaccurate and non-conservative results. Consequently, there is a strong need for a simplified closure-based crack growth prediction methodology for components exhibiting this type of flaw.  Ongoing research is focused on the development of a pragmatic modified strip-yield model for the surface flaw, allowing prediction of crack closure and fatigue crack growth along the crack front. Modified strip-yield models have found wide application for prediction of crack closure in two-dimensional cracked geometries.

Simulation of Fatigue Crack Growth in Residual Stress Fields.  It has long been recognized that the introduction of carefully controlled compressive residual stress fields is a powerful fatigue life enhancement method, and thus a key component in any service life extension program.  Advanced methodologies to model the improved resistance to fatigue crack growth associated with a prescribed residual stress distribution are being investigated.

Finite Element Modeling of Microstructurally Small Cracks.  When a crack is small, the material surrounding the crack may no longer be considered an isotropic continuum.  Each grain may be modeled as a unique plastically anisotropic material with a specific crystallographic orientation.  Single crystal plasticity theory enables the inhomogeneous nature of plastic deformation within a single grain to be simulated.  This theory forms the foundation for the development of anisotropic constitutive equations governing the plastic deformation within a grain.  When modeling the fatigue crack growth of small cracks, the interaction of the crack with grain boundaries becomes significant.  FEA analyses have been employed to simulate the interaction of a growing crack with a single grain boundary.  The boundary was approximated as a discrete material interface between two single crystals with different crystallographic orientations.

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PUBLICATIONS

Selected Recent Publications