Nucleation and propagation of fracture in viscoelastic elastomers: A complete phase-field theory
Farhad Kamarei, Evan Breedlove, Oscar Lopez-Pamies

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive phase-field theory for fracture in viscoelastic elastomers, integrating viscoelasticity, strength, and fracture energy to predict crack nucleation and propagation under quasistatic loads.
Contribution
It extends existing phase-field models to include viscous dissipation and a generalized strength surface for elastomers, providing a complete macroscopic fracture theory.
Findings
The theory accurately predicts crack nucleation and growth in elastomers.
Numerical implementation demonstrates robustness and applicability.
Incorporates viscous energy dissipation into fracture modeling.
Abstract
This paper presents a macroscopic theory, alongside its numerical implementation, aimed at describing, explaining, and predicting the nucleation and propagation of fracture in viscoelastic materials subjected to quasistatic loading conditions. The focus is on polymers, in particular, on elastomers. To this end, the starting point of this work is devoted to summarizing the large body of experimental results on how elastomers deform, nucleate cracks, and propagate cracks when subjected to mechanical loads. When viewed collectively, the experiments make it plain that there are three basic ingredients that any attempt at a complete macroscopic theory of fracture in elastomers ought to account for: i) the viscoelasticity of the elastomer; ii) its strength; and iii) its fracture energy. A theory is then introduced that accounts for all these three basic ingredients by extending the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElasticity and Material Modeling · Numerical methods in engineering · Thermoelastic and Magnetoelastic Phenomena
