Abstract
The intrinsic relationship of the thermal stress intensity factor and temperature difference between the upper and lower surface of the crack have been studied in this paper. The results show the thermal stress intensity factor is always proportional to the temperature difference between the upper and lower crack surface, and the ratio depends only on material parameters and crack length, but is independent of loading condition. For a finite medium problem, the above conclusion is still valid by simply adding a size related correction factor. When the size of medium is 10 times larger than the crack size, the size related correction factor is less than 1.019, that is, the error is less than 2%. Our conclusion provides a theoretical basis to estimate the localization thermal stress intensity factor simply by measuring the temperature difference of the crack surface.
Disclosure statement
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.