How Material Heterogeneity Creates Rough Fractures
Will Steinhardt, Shmuel M. Rubinstein

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how material heterogeneity influences fracture surface roughness through a simple, universal framework, linking heterogeneity parameters to crack morphology in brittle hydrogels.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, minimal model connecting heterogeneity characteristics to fracture roughness, validated through experiments with controlled hydrogel heterogeneity.
Findings
Roughness depends on a single parameter related to heterogeneity.
Heterogeneity size scales as the 5/2 power of the perturbation probability.
Universal behavior captured by 1D ballistic step dynamics.
Abstract
Fractures are a critical process in how materials wear, weaken, and fail whose unpredictable behavior can have dire consequences. While the behavior of smooth cracks in ideal materials is well understood, it is assumed that for real, heterogeneous systems, fracture propagation is complex, generating rough fracture surfaces that are highly sensitive to specific details of the medium. Here we show how fracture roughness and material heterogeneity are inextricably connected via a simple framework. Studying hydraulic fractures in brittle hydrogels that have been supplemented with microbeads or glycerol to create controlled material heterogeneity, we show that the morphology of the crack surface depends solely on one parameter: the probability to perturb the front above a critical size to produce a step-like instability. This probability scales linearly with the number density, and as…
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