How criticality meets bifurcation in compressive failure of disordered solids
Ashwij Mayya, Estelle Berthier, Laurent Ponson

TL;DR
This study investigates the nature of compressive failure in disordered solids, revealing it as a standard bifurcation rather than a critical phenomenon, with damage precursors linked to localization processes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that damage precursors are not signs of criticality but are related to the evolution towards localization, challenging previous interpretations of failure precursors.
Findings
Damage precursors follow a non-stationary depinning model.
Divergence of precursor size is due to loss of stability, not criticality.
Failure is a standard bifurcation with marginal role of disorder.
Abstract
Continuum mechanics describes compressive failure as a standard bifurcation in the response of a material to an increasing load: damage, which initially grows uniformly in the material, localizes within a thin band at failure. Yet, experiments recording the acoustic activity preceding localization evidence power-law distributed failure precursors of increasing size, suggesting that compressive failure is a critical phenomenon. We examine here this apparent contradiction by probing the spatial organization of the damage activity and its evolution until localization during compression experiments of 2D cellular solids. The intermittent damage evolution measured in our experiments is adequately described by a non-stationary depinning equation derived from damage mechanics and reminiscent of critical phenomena. In this description, precursors are damage cascades emerging from the interplay…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStructural Response to Dynamic Loads · High-Velocity Impact and Material Behavior · Rock Mechanics and Modeling
