Critical Scaling of Solid Fragmentation at Quasistatic and Finite Strain Rates
Joel Clemmer, Mark O. Robbins
Abstract
Using two-dimensional simulations of sheared, brittle solids, we characterize the resulting fragmentation and explore its underlying critical nature. Under quasistatic loading, a power-law distribution of fragment masses emerges after fracture which grows with increasing strain. With increasing strain rate, the maximum size of a grain decreases and a shallower distribution is produced. We propose a scaling theory for distributions based on a fractal scaling of the largest mass with system size in the quasistatic limit or with a correlation length that diverges as a power of rate in the finite-rate limit. Critical exponents are measured using finite-size scaling techniques.
Topics & Concepts
Quasistatic processScalingQuasistatic loadingBrittlenessStrain rateFractalPower lawMaterials sciencePhysicsMechanicsStatistical physicsMathematical analysisThermodynamicsMathematicsStatisticsGeometryHigh-Velocity Impact and Material BehaviorHigh-pressure geophysics and materialsGranular flow and fluidized beds