Crack trajectories in materials containing voids via phase-field modelling
Riccardo Cavuoto (1), Pietro Lenarda (2), Diego Misseroni (3), Marco, Paggi (2), Davide Bigoni (1) ((1) University of Trento, (2) IMT School for, Advanced Studies Lucca, (3) Laboratory for the Design of Reconfigurable, Metamaterials & Structures Trento)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that phase-field modelling accurately predicts complex crack trajectories in materials with voids, validated by experiments, and highlights its potential for designing fracture-resistant materials.
Contribution
It introduces a phase-field approach to simulate crack paths around voids, validated against experiments, showing its effectiveness in predicting complex fracture behaviors.
Findings
Crack trajectories are strongly influenced by voids and notches.
Phase-field simulations closely match experimental results.
Fracture can be arrested or nucleate at voids depending on conditions.
Abstract
Fracture growth in a material is strongly influenced by the presence of inhomogeneities, which deviate crack trajectories from rectilinearity and deeply affect failure. Increasing crack tortuosity is connected to enhancement of fracture toughness, while often a crack may even be stopped when it impinges a void, which releases the stress concentration. Therefore, the determination of crack trajectories is important in the design against failure of materials and mechanical pieces. The recently developed phase-field approach (AT1 and AT2 models), based on a variational approach to damage localization, is believed to be particularly suited to describe complex crack trajectories. This belief is examined through a comparison between simulations and photoelastic experiments on PMMA plates, which have been designed in a new way, to highlight the effects of notches and circular holes on fracture…
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