Where Humpty Dumpty Breaks: Geometry-Driven Fracture in Ellipsoidal Shells
Naoki Sekiya, Yuri Akiba, Kai Kageyama, Hokuto Nagatakiya, Ryuichi Tarumi, Tomohiko G. Sano

TL;DR
This paper reveals how the curvature of shells influences crack patterns, demonstrating that geometry governs fracture morphology and stress distribution, with implications for materials science and planetary geology.
Contribution
It introduces a unified geometric framework linking shell curvature to fracture patterns, integrating nonlinear mechanics with classical fracture criteria.
Findings
Crack morphologies depend on curvature ratios in spheroidal shells.
Shell curvature induces stress anisotropy affecting crack propagation.
Observed fracture patterns in natural systems follow the proposed geometric principles.
Abstract
Fracture networks are ubiquitous in nature, spanning scales from millimeter-sized cracks in botanical peels to hundred-kilometer-long lineae on planetary satellites. The propagation of a crack is a complex, nonlinear phenomenon governed by the interplay of mechanical properties, rheological behavior, and system geometry. While fracture mechanics has long addressed structural failure, the relationship among fracture, elasticity, and nonlinear geometry has recently revived as a focal point in condensed matter and biophysics. However, a unified framework that systematically explains how surface geometry prescribes the transition between disparate fracture morphologies remains elusive. Here we show that shell curvature provides a geometric blueprint for fracture, governing the evolution of complex crack networks through induced stress anisotropy. By internally pressurizing thin, bilayer…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCalcium Carbonate Crystallization and Inhibition · Advanced Materials and Mechanics · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
