Oscillatory and tip-splitting instabilities in 2D dynamic fracture: The roles of intrinsic material length and time scales
Aditya Vasudevan, Yuri Lubomirsky, Chih-Hung Chen, Eran Bouchbinder,, Alain Karma

TL;DR
This paper investigates oscillatory and tip-splitting instabilities in 2D dynamic fracture, emphasizing the roles of intrinsic length and time scales, and demonstrates their effects using phase-field models to deepen understanding of high-speed crack behaviors.
Contribution
It reveals that oscillatory instability depends on an intrinsic length scale independent of nonlinear elasticity and dissipation, and characterizes it as a supercritical Hopf bifurcation, advancing the theoretical understanding of crack instabilities.
Findings
Oscillatory instability exists without near-tip elastic nonlinearity, governed by dissipation length scale.
The instability is a supercritical Hopf bifurcation with vanishing amplitude at onset.
Tip-splitting instability is controlled by elastic energy transport rate.
Abstract
Recent theoretical and computational progress has led to unprecedented understanding of symmetry-breaking instabilities in 2D dynamic fracture. At the heart of this progress resides the identification of two intrinsic, near crack tip length scales -- a nonlinear elastic length scale and a dissipation length scale -- that do not exist in the classical theory of cracks. In particular, it has been shown that at a high propagation velocity , cracks in 2D brittle materials undergo an oscillatory instability whose wavelength varies linearly with , and at yet higher propagation velocities and larger loading levels, a tip-splitting instability emerges, both in agreements with experiments. In this paper, using phase-field models of brittle fracture, we demonstrate the following properties of the oscillatory instability: (i) It exists also in the absence of near-tip elastic…
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