3D-2D transition in mode-I fracture microbranching in a perturbed hexagonal close-packed lattice
Shay I. Heizler, David A. Kessler

TL;DR
This study uses three-dimensional atomistic simulations to analyze the microbranching instability in mode-I fracture, revealing a transition from 3D to 2D behavior as crack velocity increases, aligning with experimental observations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison between 2D and 3D fracture microbranching, highlighting a velocity-dependent transition in fracture behavior.
Findings
3D fracture patterns resemble 2D behavior at low velocities
A clear 3D-2D transition occurs with increasing crack velocity
Simulation results match experimental microbranching features
Abstract
Mode-I fracture exhibits microbranching in the high velocity regime where the simple straight crack is unstable. For velocities below the instability, classic modeling using linear elasticity is valid. However, showing the existence of the instability and calculating the dynamics post-instability within the linear elastic framework is difficult and controversial. The experimental results give several indications that the microbranching phenomenon is basically a three-dimensional phenomenon. Nevertheless, the theoretical effort has been focused mostly in two-dimensional modeling. In this work we study the microbranching instability using three-dimensional atomistic simulations, exploring the difference between the 2D and 3D models. We find that the basic 3D fracture pattern shares similar behavior with the 2D case. Nevertheless, we exhibit a clear 3D-2D transition as the crack velocity…
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