Litcius/Paper detail

How Fast Cracks in Brittle Solids Choose Their Path

Lital Rozen-Levy, John M. Kolinski, Gil Cohen, Jay Fineberg

2020Physical Review Letters26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While we fundamentally understand the dynamics of simple cracks propagating in brittle solids within perfect (homogeneous) materials, we do not understand how paths of moving cracks are determined. We experimentally study strongly perturbed cracks that propagate between 10% and 95% of their limiting velocity within a brittle material. These cracks are deflected by either interaction with sparsely implanted defects or via an intrinsic oscillatory instability in defect-free media. Dense high-speed measurements of the strain fields surrounding the crack tips reveal that crack paths are governed by the direction of maximal strain energy density, even when the near-tip singular fields are highly disrupted. This fundamentally important result may be utilized to either direct or guide running cracks.

Topics & Concepts

BrittlenessLimitingInstabilityMaterials scienceHomogeneousMechanicsPath (computing)Strain energyFracture mechanicsFissureStrain energy density functionClassical mechanicsCondensed matter physicsComposite materialPhysicsStatistical physicsFinite element methodComputer scienceMechanical engineeringThermodynamicsEngineeringProgramming languageUltrasonics and Acoustic Wave PropagationSeismic Waves and AnalysisNumerical methods in engineering