Micro-branching in mode-I fracture in a randomly perturbed lattice
Shay I. Heizler, David A. Kessler, Yonatan S. Elbaz

TL;DR
This study models mode-I fracture in lattices with noisy bonds, successfully reproducing micro-branching and crack dynamics observed in experiments, using a perturbed force law and 3-body interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach with a small perturbation parameter and 3-body forces to replicate crack micro-branching in lattices, aligning with experimental observations.
Findings
Reproduces micro-branching in high velocity crack regimes
Shows transition from steady-state to unstable cracks with micro-branches
Indicates potential power-law behavior in micro-branch shapes
Abstract
We study mode-I fracture in lattices with noisy bonds. In contrast to previous attempts, by using a small parameter that perturbs the force-law between the atoms in perfect lattices and using a 3-body force law, simulations reproduce the qualitative behavior of the beyond steady-state cracks in the high velocity regime, including reasonable micro-branching. As far as the physical properties such as the structure factor , the radial or angular distributions, these lattices share the physical properties of perfect lattices rather than that of an amorphous material (e.g., the continuous random network model). A clear transition can be seen between steady-state cracks, where a single crack propagates in the midline of the sample and the regime of unstable cracks, where micro-branches start to appear near the main crack, in line with previous experimental results. This is seen both in…
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