Dynamic phenomena and crack propagation in dissimilar elastic lattices
A. Piccolroaz, N. Gorbushin, G.S. Mishuris, M.J. Nieves

TL;DR
This paper analyzes dynamic Mode III interfacial fracture in dissimilar elastic lattices, revealing how lattice dissimilarity influences crack propagation, wave radiation, and vibration modes through analytical and numerical methods.
Contribution
It provides an exact analytical solution for crack propagation in dissimilar lattices and uncovers the existence of trapped modes and preferential wave radiation directions.
Findings
Existence of trapped vibration modes ahead of the crack
Multiple preferential directions for wave radiation due to lattice dissimilarity
Influence of lattice dissimilarity on steady failure modes and lattice dynamics
Abstract
Dynamic Mode III interfacial fracture in a dissimilar square-cell lattice, composed of two contrasting mass-spring lattice half-planes joined at an interface, is considered. The fracture, driven by a remotely applied load, is assumed to propagate at a constant speed along the interface. The choice of the load allows the solution of the problem to be matched with the crack tip field for a Mode III interfacial crack propagating between two dissimilar continuous elastic materials. The lattice problem is reduced to a system of functional equations of the Wiener-Hopf type through the Fourier transform. The derived solution of the system fully characterises the process. We demonstrate the existence of trapped vibration modes that propagate ahead of the crack along the interface during the failure process. In addition, we show as the crack propagates several preferential directions for wave…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasonics and Acoustic Wave Propagation · Numerical methods in engineering · Mechanical Behavior of Composites
