Variable-Order Fracture Mechanics and its Application to Dynamic Fracture
Sansit Patnaik, Fabio Semperlotti

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel variable-order mechanics framework for modeling dynamic fracture in solids, enabling detailed crack pattern analysis with reduced computational cost and validated against experimental data.
Contribution
It develops a fully evolutionary variable-order fracture model that captures complex crack behaviors without prior damage assumptions or additional equations.
Findings
Accurately models crack nucleation and propagation.
Captures crack surface roughening and branching.
Reduces computational cost compared to traditional methods.
Abstract
This study presents the formulation, the numerical solution, and the validation of a theoretical framework based on the concept of variable-order mechanics and capable of modeling dynamic fracture in brittle and quasi-brittle solids. More specifically, the reformulation of the elastodynamic problem via variable and fractional order operators enables a unique and extremely powerful approach to model nucleation and propagation of cracks in solids under dynamic loading. The resulting dynamic fracture formulation is fully evolutionary hence enabling the analysis of complex crack patterns without requiring any a prior assumptions on the damage location and the growth path, as well as the use of any algorithm to track the evolving crack surface. The evolutionary nature of the variable-order formalism also prevents the need for additional partial differential equations to predict the damage…
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