Elastic nonlinearities in a one-dimensional model of fracture
Eran Bouchbinder, Ting-Shek Lo

TL;DR
This paper investigates the impact of elastic nonlinearities on fracture dynamics using one-dimensional models, revealing limitations of linear elastic fracture mechanics at finite crack velocities.
Contribution
It introduces two simple 1D models to compare nonlinear and linear elastic fracture mechanics, highlighting the failure of linear approximation at higher crack velocities.
Findings
Linear models fail at finite crack tip velocities.
Nonlinear elastic effects significantly influence crack dynamics.
Linear approximation omits critical nonlinear behaviors.
Abstract
The dynamics of rapid brittle cracks is commonly studied in the framework of linear elastic fracture mechanics where nonlinearities are neglected. However, recent experimental and theoretical work demonstrated explicitly the importance of elastic nonlinearities in fracture dynamics. We study two simple one-dimensional models of fracture in order to gain insights about the role of elastic nonlinearities and the implications of their exclusion in the common linear elastic approximation. In one model we consider the decohesion of a nonlinear elastic membrane from a substrate. In a second model we follow the philosophy of linear elastic fracture mechanics and study a linearized version of the nonlinear model. By analyzing the steady state solutions, the velocity-load relations and the response to perturbations of the two models we show that the linear approximation fails at finite crack tip…
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