Thermodynamics of fiber bundles
Steven R. Pride, Renaud Toussaint

TL;DR
This paper applies a thermodynamic theory based on entropy maximization to fiber bundle models, revealing exact results, entropy evolution, and a novel phase transition related to damage accumulation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the entropy-based thermodynamic approach accurately describes fiber bundle damage, introducing the concept of an entropy maximum phase transition in these systems.
Findings
Exact agreement with known fiber bundle results
Identification of a new entropy-maximum phase transition
Dependence of transition points on disorder distribution
Abstract
A recent theory that determines the properties of disordered solids as the solid accumulates damage is applied to the special case of fiber bundles with global load sharing and is shown to be exact in this case. The theory postulates that the probability of observing a given emergent damage state is obtained by maximizing the emergent entropy as defined by Shannon subject to energetic constraints. This theory yields the known exact results for the fiber-bundle model with global load sharing and holds for any quenched-disorder distribution. It further defines how the entropy evolves as a function of stress, and shows definitively how the concepts of temperature and entropy emerge in a problem where all statistics derive from the initial quenched disorder. A previously unnoticed phase transition is shown to exist as the entropy goes through a maximum. In general, this entropy-maximum…
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