Creep-like behavior in athermal threshold dynamics: Effects of disorder and stress
Subhadeep Roy, Takahiro Hatano

TL;DR
This study investigates creep-like behaviors in athermal fiber bundle models with varying interaction ranges and disorder, revealing power-law strain rate behaviors and their dependence on disorder and interaction range, supported by analytical and numerical results.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of creep-like phenomena in athermal models, highlighting the effects of disorder and interaction range on the dynamics, with analytical solutions for the mean-field limit.
Findings
Creep-like behaviors follow Omori-Utsu and inverse Omori laws with specific exponents.
Disorder strength influences the onset time of power-law behavior.
Interaction range affects the universality of the Omori-Utsu exponent.
Abstract
We study the dynamical aspects of a statistical-mechanical model for fracture of heterogeneous media: the fiber bundle model with various interaction range. Although the model does not include any thermal activation process, the system exhibits creep-like behaviors under a constant load being slightly above the critical value. These creep-like behaviors comprise three stages: in the primary and tertiary stages, the strain rate exhibits power-law behaviors with time, which are well described by the Omori-Utsu and the inverse Omori laws, respectively, although the exponents are larger than those typically observed in experiments. A characteristic time that defines the onset of power-law behavior in the Omori-Utsu law is found to decrease with the strength of disorder in the system. The analytical solution, which agrees with the above numerical results, is obtained for the mean-field…
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