The effect of interactions on elastic cavitation
Ali Saeedi, S Chockalingam, Mrityunjay Kothari

TL;DR
This paper investigates how interactions with interfaces and other cavities influence the cavitation threshold in soft materials, revealing non-monotonic and boundary-dependent effects.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how cavity interactions alter cavitation pressure, extending classical results to more realistic multi-defect and boundary scenarios.
Findings
Cavitation pressure increases near a rigid interface, approaching 3.5μ.
Interacting cavities show a non-monotonic cavitation threshold, peaking at ~2.67μ.
Threshold approaches bulk value of 2.5μ for distant cavities.
Abstract
Cavitation refers to the sudden, unstable expansion of a defect or cavity within a material in response to applied loads, when the loads reach a critical threshold. It is widely recognized as a common failure nucleation mechanism in soft and biological materials. For an isolated cavity in the bulk of an incompressible neo-Hookean solid loaded by remote hydrostatic tension, the classical cavitation pressure is well established as , where is the shear modulus. However, in realistic settings the cavitation threshold is influenced by interaction of the cavity with nearby interfaces and other cavities. Interface interaction effects are particularly relevant in multi-material systems and additively manufactured structures, where defects frequently occur near material boundaries. Meanwhile, cavity-cavity interactions become important in materials exhibiting finite porosity, such…
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